Agenda 09-21-10 Searchable
The City of
Boynton Beach
Boynton Beach
100 E. Boynton Beach Boulevard ● (561) 742-6000
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2010
6:30 PM
FINAL AGENDA
City Commission
AGENDA
Jose Rodriguez
Mayor – At Large
Marlene Ross
Vice Mayor – District IV
William Orlove
Commissioner – District I
Woodrow Hay
Commissioner – District II
Steven Holzman
Commissioner – District III
Kurt Bressner
City Manager
James Cherof
City Attorney
Janet M. Prainito
City Clerk
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GENERAL RULES & PROCEDURES FOR PUBLIC PARTICIPATION AT
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH COMMISSION MEETINGS
THE AGENDA:
There is an official agenda for every meeting of the City Commissioners, which determines the
order of business conducted at the meeting. The City Commission will not take action upon any
matter, proposal, or item of business, which is not listed upon the official agenda, unless a
majority of the Commission has first consented to the presentation for consideration and
action.
Consent Agenda Items:
These are items which the Commission does not need to discuss
individually and which are voted on as a group.
Regular Agenda Items:
These are items which the Commission will discuss individually in the
order listed on the agenda.
Voice Vote:
A voice vote by the Commission indicates approval of the agenda item. This can
be by either a regular voice vote with "Ayes & Nays" or by a roll call vote.
SPEAKING AT COMMISSION MEETINGS:
The public is encouraged to offer comment to the Commission at their meetings during Public Hearings,
Public Audience, and on any regular agenda item, as hereinafter described.
City Commission meetings are business meetings and, as such, the Commission retains the right to
impose time limits on the discussion on an issue.
Public Hearings:
Any citizen may speak on an official agenda item under the section entitled
“Public Hearings.”
Public Audience:
Any citizen may be heard concerning any matter within the scope of the
jurisdiction of the Commission – Time Limit – Three (3) Minutes
Regular Agenda Items:
Any citizen may speak on any official agenda item(s) listed on the
agenda after a motion has been made and properly seconded, with the exception of Consent
Agenda Items that have not been pulled for separate vote, reports, presentations and first
reading of Ordinances – Time Limit – Three (3) minutes
ADDRESSING THE COMMISSION:
When addressing the Commission, please step up to either podium and state, for the record, your
name and address.
DECORUM:
Any person who disputes the meeting while addressing the Commission may be ordered by the
presiding officer to cease further comments and/or to step down from the podium. Failure to
discontinue comments or step down when so ordered shall be treated as a continuing disruption of the
public meeting. An order by the presiding officer issued to control the decorum of the meeting is
binding, unless over-ruled by the majority vote of the Commission members present.
Please turn off all pagers and cellular phones in the City Commission Chambers while the City
Commission Meeting is in session.
City Commission meetings are held in the Boynton Beach City Commission Chambers, 100 East
Boynton Beach Boulevard, Boynton Beach. All regular meetings are held typically on the first and third
Tuesdays of every month, starting at 6:30 p.m. (Please check the Agenda Schedule – some meetings
have been moved due to Holidays/Election Day).
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1. OPENINGS
A. Call to order - Mayor Jose Rodriguez
B. Invocation
C. Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag led by Commissioner Orlove
D. Agenda Approval:
1. Additions, Deletions, Corrections
2. Adoption
2. OTHER
A. Informational Items by Members of the City Commission
3. ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
A. 2nd Budget Public Hearing & FINAL Adoption of FY 2010-2011 Annual Operating &
CIP Budget - NOTE: This will be a Special Meeting held on 9/27/10 at 6:30 pm –
Commission Chambers
B. Permit announcement of the Fall 2010 semester of the City Services Institute
C. Presentation of Nonprofits First®, a Boynton Beach based nonprofit organization that
provides programs and services for Palm Beach County 501(c)(3) organizations, by
Pedro del Sol, President and CEO.
D. Establish a date, time and public outreach for Climate Action Plan Special Meeting
E. Proclaim September 27, 2 010 as Family Day in the City of Boynton Beach.
4. PUBLIC AUDIENCE
INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO 3 MINUTE PRESENTATIONS (at the
discretion of the Chair, this 3 minute allowance may need to be adjusted depending
on the level of business coming before the City Commission)
5. ADMINISTRATIVE
A. Appoint eligible members of the community to serve in vacant positions on City
advisory boards.
B. Accept the resignation of Dan Holthouse, a regular member of the Library Board.
C. Accept the resignation of Herb Suss, a regular member of the Golf Course Advisory
Committee.
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D. Appoint City representative to the Greater Boynton Beach Foundation, Inc. Board of
Directors.
6. CONSENT AGENDA
Matters in this section of the Agenda are proposed and recommended by the City
Manager for "Consent Agenda" approval of the action indicated in each item, with
all of the accompanying material to become a part of the Public Record and subject
to staff comments.
A. Approve the Minutes of the Regular City Commission meeting held on September 7,
2010.
B. Authorize the Finance Department to increase the Allowance for Uncollectable
Accounts by $102,371 representing the full amount for currently unpaid Utility and
Solid Waste billings originating in FY 2008-2009 that currently remain unpaid.
C. Accept the written report to the Commission for purchases over $10,000.00 for the
month of August 2010.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-124
D. - Approve the First Amendment to the
Interlocal Agreement (ILA) between the City and the Board of County Commissioners
that authorized the City to receive funding as a partner in the continued planning and
implementation of the Youth Violence Prevention Program (YVPP) through September
30, 2010, extending the term to December 31, 2010.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION N0. R10-125
E. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Sandra Watson - Sister to Sista's Young Ladies Mentoring and
Enrichment Program (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention
Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to
December 31, 2010
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-126
F. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with RM Lee, Community Development Center, 900 N. Seacrest Blvd.,
Boynton Beach, Florida, 33435 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September
30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-127
G. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Tevis Gardenhire, Art is Motivation (AIM), 1118 S. Monterey Circle,
Boynton Beach, Florida, 33436 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September
30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-128
H. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Greg Russ, Russo Consulting Group Inc., 10727 Palm Springs Drive,
Boca Raton, Florida, 33428 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September
30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
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PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-129
I. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Gary Davis, Art of Film Making Audio Visual Life Skills, 5056 Lantana
Road, Unit 4205, Lake Worth, Florida, 33463 (the "Provider"), which is part of the
Youth Violence Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement
from September 30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-130
J. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Richard Brochu, Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs, 7067 Peninsula
Court, Lake Worth, Florida, 33467 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September
30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-131
K. - Approve the addendum to the Services
Agreement with Kayla Lundy, Success Teens, 1695 W. 26th Street, Riviera Beach,
Florida, 33404 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention Project
(YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to
December 31, 2010
L. Approve adjusting the value of the authorization for the direct purchase of 36-inch
diameter pipe supplies from Ferguson Enterprises, Inc., upward from $844,467.80 (as
approved on July 20, 2010) to $884,999.85; as required for the Wellfield Interconnect
Project-Section A.
M. Approve full release of surety for the project known as K-Mart Expansion - Boynton
West Shopping Center, and authorize refunding the $61,000 cash surety to K-Mart
Corporation.
N. Approve the updated Library Long Range Plan for 2010-2013.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-132
O. - Approve an application and agreement for
Library State Aid To Public Libraries Grant for FY2010-2011.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-133
P. - Approve a three-year Processing
Agreement between SUN RECYCLING, LLC ("SUN"), 790 Hillbrath Drive, Lantana,
FL and the City of Boynton Beach ("CITY") to allow the City to transfer recycling
material including yard waste, mixed recyclables and construction and demolition
debris to the Sun Processing Facility allowing for tracking of material at a lower cost
per ton.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-134
Q. - Approve an agreement with Mangrove
Employer Services to provide COBRA Administrative services, to assist the City as
Plan Sponsor in complying with certain Federal requirements regarding the City's
welfare benefit health plans including Medical, Dental and Vision.
7. BIDS AND PURCHASES OVER $100,000
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-135
A. - Approve Addendum to Construction
Services Agreement with B&B Underground Contractors, Inc. to exceed the
authorized project amount of $2,466,047.87 by an additional $27,749.61 for the S.E.
4th Street Water Main, Stormwater and Roadway Improvement Project for a final
project total of $2,493,797.48.
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PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-136
B. - Award the "Two-Year Contract For
Custodial Cleaning Services For Facilities", Bid #063-2511-10/JMA to JT Bay, LLC
d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group, of Tampa, Florida, in the amount of $223,533.84
plus a 10% contingency for a total annual award amount of $245,887.22 for each
year of the two (2) year contract.
C. Award Field Change Directive No. 1 to Insituform Technologies, for the purpose of re-
lining sewer mains at Cypress Creek in the amount of $103,450.12 , of which
$47,070.92 is from the previously-authorized contingency.
8. CODE COMPLIANCE & LEGAL SETTLEMENTS
None
9. PUBLIC HEARING
7 P.M. OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS THE AGENDA PERMITS
The City Commission will conduct these public hearings in its dual capacity as
Local Planning Agency and City Commission.
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-022 - FIRST READING
A. - Approve Congress
Middle School (ANEX 10-001) annexing a 0.95-acre property located at the southern
terminus of 31st Terrace S. Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
PROPOSED ORDINANACE NO. 10-023 - FIRST READING
B. - Approve Congress
Middle School (LUAR 10-001) reclassifying land use designation of subject property
from Palm Beach County's IND (industrial) to MoDR (Moderate Density Residential.
Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-024 - FIRST READING
C. - Approve Congress
Middle School (LUAR 10-001) rezoning of the subject property from Palm Beach
County's AR (Agricultural Residential) to PU (Public Usage). Applicant: Michael C.
Owens.
10. CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-137
A. - Award for a three year Towing Franchise
RFP#055-2110-10/CJD to the top two ranked respondents for Towing and Storage
Services: Beck's Towing & Recovery, Inc. in the amount of $104,500 and Zuccala
Wrecker Service, Inc. in the amount of $100,075 for a total annual contract price of
$204,575.00 and authorize the City Manager to execute an agreement in a form
deemed sufficient by the City Attorney.
B. Appoint an Advisory Committee to review two renaming requests for Jaycee Park.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-138
C. - Approve an agreement with Net Assets, a
sole source provider, for the implementation, maintenance, customer service support
and hosting of the Conduits reporting service
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D. Accept the following report on the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP).
E. Accept the Budget Status Report of the General Fund and the Utility Fund for the eight
(11) month period ended August 31, 2010.
F. Review of capital project delivery methods. No Commission action required.
11. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
A. Conduit Bond Issue - Charter School of Boynton Beach - October 5, 2010
B. Noise Control Ordinance - First Reading - TABLED ON July 20, 2010 and August 3,
2010 - (TBD)
C. Live Entertainment Ordinance - First Reading - TABLED ON July 20, 2010 and August
3, 2010 - (TBD)
D. Police Complex -- Discussion of project timing, scope, location and funding
alternatives available (TBA)
12. NEW BUSINESS
A. Consideration of a salary reduction by City Commission for Fiscal Year 2010-11.
13. LEGAL
A. Request for closed door session at 6:00 p.m. on October 5, 2010 regarding CLEAR
CHANNEL OUTDOOR, INC., Petitioner vs. CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT, PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION, Respondent
Case No. 502010CA013764XXXXMB
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-139
B. - Authorize a second 60-day extension of
the "Notice of Intent" (NOI) and moratorium to allow final processing of ordinances
following the study of impacts and regulations related to pain clinics, pain
management clinics and other uses that dispense prescription pain medications.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-140
C. - Authorize a second 60-day extension of
the "Notice of Intent" (NOI) and moratorium to allow final processing of ordinances
following the study of impacts and regulations related to adult entertainment uses.
14. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-021 - SECOND READING
A. - Amending the City of
Boynton Beach Code of Ordinances Article I, by creating Section 2-25, to be entitled
"Code of Ethics", incorporating by reference the Palm Beach County Code of Ethics
into the City's Code of Ordinances.
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-120
B. - Approve an interlocal agreement with
(TABLED ON SEPTEMBER 7,
Palm Beach County for Ethics Commission Oversight.
2010)
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C. Appoint members to 7-member independent Community Redevelopment Agency
Board.
15. ADJOURNMENT
NOTICE
IF A PERSON DECIDES TO APPEAL ANY DECISION MADE BY THE CITY COMMISSION WITH RESPECT TO ANY MATTER
CONSIDERED AT THIS MEETING, HE/SHE WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND, FOR SUCH PURPOSE,
HE/SHE MAY NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDING IS MADE, WHICH RECORD INCLUDES
THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED. (F.S. 286.0105)
THE CITY SHALL FURNISH APPROPRIATE AUXILIARY AIDS AND SERVICES WHERE NECESSARY TO AFFORD AN
INDIVIDUAL WITH A DISABILITY AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TO PARTICIPATE IN AND ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF A SERVICE,
PROGRAM, OR ACTIVITY CONDUCTED BY THE CITY. PLEASE CONTACT THE CITY CLERK'S OFFICE (561) 742-6060 AT
LEAST TWENTY-FOUR HOURS PRIOR TO THE PROGRAM OR ACTIVITY IN ORDER FOR THE CITY TO REASONABLY
ACCOMMODATE YOUR REQUEST.
ADDITIONAL AGENDA ITEMS MAY BE ADDED SUBSEQUENT TO THE PUBLICATION OF THE AGENDA ON THE CITY'S WEB
SITE. INFORMATION REGARDING ITEMS ADDED TO THE AGENDA AFTER IT IS PUBLISHED ON THE CITY'S WEB SITE CAN
BE OBTAINED FROM THE OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK.
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3. A
ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
September 21, 2010
COBB
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September 7, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
2nd Budget Public Hearing & FINAL Adoption of FY 2010-
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
2011 Annual Operating & CIP Budget - NOTE: This will be a Special Meeting held on 9/27/10 at 6:30
pm – Commission Chambers
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
ISCAL MPACT
A:
LTERNATIVES
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3. B
ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Permit announcement of the Fall 2010 semester of the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
City Services Institute
ER:
The City Services Institute was developed to acquaint residents
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
and business owners with the structure of City government and to provide them with
information and tours of City facilities in an entertaining and informative manner that will enable
them to become more fully involved in the community.
H?
This announcement will help raise public
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
awareness of the availability of this educational opportunity that will enable citizens to better
interact and become involved with their City government.
FI:
None
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not permit announcement
LTERNATIVES
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ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Presentation of Nonprofits First®, a Boynton Beach based
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
nonprofit organization that provides programs and services for Palm Beach County 501(c)(3)
organizations, by Pedro del Sol, President and CEO.
ER:
As a unique organization in South Florida, Nonprofits First’s goal is
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
to help build a nonprofit community that excels in the development and implementation of
sound management practices. Composed of experienced executives, consultants and
volunteers, the vision of Nonprofits First is a community in which all nonprofits achieve their
highest level of success. Nonprofits First provides services to over 300 nonprofit organizations
through education, leadership development, management services (IT, Finance and HR) and a
Certification program. Programs and services are designed to help nonprofit agencies
maximize the resources entrusted to them by public and private donors.
Mr. del Sol will provide an overview of how Nonprofits First is striving to help the local nonprofit
community become more effective and efficient in their business operations. The objective is
to raise awareness of the successes of local nonprofits and to introduce some of Nonprofits
First’s service offerings as a resource to other nonprofits in the greater Boynton Beach area.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not to allow the presentation.
LTERNATIVES
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ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Establish a date, time and public outreach for Climate
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Action Plan Special Meeting
th
ER:
At the July 20 Commission meeting, City Commission agreed to a
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
staff meeting for the purpose of establishing priorities and timelines for the action items
contained in the Climate Action Plan. Staff would like to set the meeting for the week of
October 11, for a period of two hours, to be held at Intracoastal Park Clubhouse. The meeting
would be conducted as a Special Meeting of the City Commission to allow the Commission the
ability to vote on policy decisions necessary for implementation.
The basic topics from the Climate Action Plan are as follows:
4.0 Objectives and Recommendations
4.1 Government Operations and Policies
4.2 Community Engagement
4.3 Fuel and Energy Use
4.4 Transportation
4.5 Land Use and Development
Public outreach notification of this meeting will be achieved through Special Meeting notice by
the City Clerk’s office, message posting on the City Hall Marquee, Message on Hold, and
media blasts by the Public Information Office.
H?
Establish implementation policy and
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
timeline for action items contained in the Climate Action Plan to achieve the desired Green
House Gas Emission reduction approved by City Commission.
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FI:
To be determined
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not implement the Climate Action Plan at this time.
LTERNATIVES
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3. E
ANNOUNCEMENTS, COMMUNITY & SPECIAL EVENTS & PRESENTATIONS
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Proclaim September 27, 2 010 as Family Day in the City
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
of Boynton Beach.
ER:
Recognize September 27, 2010 as Family Day, sponsored by the
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University.
H?
The proclamation will help promote the
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
idea of family values and the Family Day STAR Pledge to:
S
pend time with your kids by having dinner together,
T
alk to them about their friends, interests and the dangers of drugs and alcohol,
A
nswer their questions and listen to what they say and
R
ecognize that you have the power to keep your kids substance-free.
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not approve request.
LTERNATIVES
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P R O C L A M A T I O N
WHEREAS
the use of illegal and prescription drugs and the abuse of alcohol and nicotine constitute the
greatest threats to the well-being of America's children;
WHEREAS
15 years of surveys conducted by The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse
(CASA) at Columbia University have consistently found that the more often children and teenagers eat
dinner with their families the less likely they are to smoke, drink and use illegal drugs;
WHEREAS
frequent family dining is associated with lower rates of teen smoking, drinking, illegal drug
use and prescription drug abuse;
WHEREAS
the correlation between frequent family dinners and reduced risk for teen substance abuse
is well documented;
WHEREAS
parents who are engaged in their children’s lives – through such activities as frequent
family dinners – are less likely to have children who abuse substances;
WHEREAS
family dinners have long constituted a substantial pillar of family life in America:
Now, therefore
, I, Jose Rodriguez, Mayor of the City of Boynton Beach, do hereby proclaim the fourth
Monday of every September as
TM
Family Day – A Day to Eat Dinner with Your Children
and urge all citizens to recognize and participate in its observance.
In witness whereof
, I Jose Rodriguez, have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of the City of
Boynton Beach, Florida, to be affixed at Boynton Beach, Florida, the 21st day of September, two
thousand and ten.
_________________________________
Jose Rodriguez, Mayor
ATTEST: City of Boynton Beach
___________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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5. A
ADMINISTRATIVE
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Appoint eligible members of the community to serve in
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
vacant positions on City advisory boards.
ER:
The attached list contains the names of those who have applied for
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
vacancies on the various Advisory Boards. A list of vacancies is provided with the designated
Commission member having responsibility for the appointment to fill each vacancy.
H?
Appointments are necessary to keep our
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
Advisory Boards full and operating as effectively as possible.
FI:
None
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Allow vacancies to remain unfilled.
LTERNATIVES
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5. B
ADMINISTRATIVE
September 21, 2010
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RACC:
Accept the resignation of Dan Holthouse, a regular
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
member of the Library Board.
ER:
An email was received September 13, 2010 from Dan Holthouse
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
resigning as a regular member from the Library Board due to his unavailability to attend
meetings.
H?
The Library Board will have a vacancy for
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
one regular member.
FI:
None
ISCAL MPACT
A:
None
LTERNATIVES
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5. C
ADMINISTRATIVE
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Accept the resignation of Herb Suss, a regular member of
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
the Golf Course Advisory Committee.
ER:
On September 14, 2010 Herb Suss submitted an email (attached)
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
indicating his desire to resign from the Golf Course Advisory Committee.
H?
The Golf Course Advisory Committee will
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
have to function with one less regular member until a replacement can be found.
FI:
None
ISCAL MPACT
A:
None
LTERNATIVES
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5. D
ADMINISTRATIVE
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P UB
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSNFINISHED USINESS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 FAI
IDS AND URCHASES OVER UTURE GENDA TEMS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Appoint City representative to the Greater Boynton Beach
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Foundation, Inc. Board of Directors.
ER:
Please see the attached letter of request from the Greater Boynton
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
Beach Foundation to appoint a City representative to the Board of Directors. The Foundation
request recommends Assistant City Manager, Lori LaVerriere be selected as appointee.
H?
The Board appointment will allow the City
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
to remain involved in the Foundation’s progress. The seat will provide a conduit for future
project applications to the Board.
FI:
none
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not appoint City representative to the Board; Select another individual to
LTERNATIVES
appoint.
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6. A
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Approve the Minutes of the Regular City Commission
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
meeting held on September 7, 2010.
ER:
The City Commission met on September 7, 2010 and minutes
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
were prepared from the notes taken at the meeting by the Deputy City Clerk. The Florida
Statutes provide that minutes of all Commission meetings be prepared, approved and
maintained in the records of the City of Boynton Beach.
H?
A permanent record of the actions taken
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
by the City Commission will be maintained as a permanent record.
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
N/A
LTERNATIVES
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40 of 408
6. B
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Authorize the Finance Department to increase the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Allowance for Uncollectable Accounts by $102,371 representing the full amount for currently unpaid
Utility and Solid Waste billings originating in FY 2008-2009 that currently remain unpaid.
ER:
This action is an annual accounting internal control feature. The $102,371
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
involves 1,340 accounts that were billed and currently remain past due for the fiscal year October 1,
2008 to September 30, 2009.
The process and explanation for collecting delinquent receivables by the Utility Customer Service staff
follows:
When a receivable becomes past due, staff attempts to collect the amount due for a period of
six to seven months. Staff collected a total of $3,468 of the past due accounts.
Attempts by the City to collect these past due amounts has limited success since a majority of
the accounts are from rentals, foreclosures or abandonment and the customers have moved
from the area.
After this six to seven month period, the accounts are segregated from current accounts for
control purposes and turned over to the City’s collection agency for subsequent follow up and
collection of the past due accounts.
A listing of the accounts is available upon request, but too large to include with this item.
Once approved by the Commission, the Finance Department increases the existing Allowance for
Uncollectible Accounts to the same amount for those accounts deemed uncollectible. If any of those
accounts are subsequently collected, the receivable and the uncollectible accounts are reduced by the
amounts collected.
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The amount being deemed uncollectible comprises less than one-half percent (actually 0.26%) of the
total amount billed during that period for water, sewer, stormwater and refuse. We consider this an
acceptable loss when compared to neighboring municipalities, such as Deerfield Beach, Boca Raton,
Delray Beach, Lake Worth and West Palm Beach who consider an average of 0.5% to 1% loss in
uncollected revenues to be acceptable. Our percentage falls below that value.
H?
None
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
As the receivables were recognized as revenues when the accounts were originally
ISCAL MPACT
billed, revenues will now be reduced by $102,371 that is equal to the amount being deemed
uncollectible.
The amount of $102,371 is immaterial (0.26%) compared to the total Utility and Solid Waste revenues
of approximately $45 million annually.
The City’s collection agency will continue to collect the unpaid amounts and those amounts will be
recognized as revenues, net of the fee charged by the collection agency
A:
None as the same procedures are in place to collect the amounts by the collection
LTERNATIVES
agency. Also, the Finance Department will make the appropriate control entries at year end.
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6. C
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Accept the written report to the Commission for purchases
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
over $10,000.00 for the month of August 2010.
ER:
Per Ordinance No.01-66, Chapter 2, Section 2-56.1 Exceptions to
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
competitive bidding, Paragraph b, which states: “Further, the City Manager, or in the City
Manager’s absence, the Acting City Manager is authorized to execute a purchase order on
behalf of the City for such purchases under the $25,000 bid threshold for personal property,
commodities, and services, or $75,000 for construction. The City Manager shall file a written
report with the City Commission at the second Commission meeting of each month listing the
purchase orders approved by the City Manager, or Acting City Manager.
H?
Ordinance No.01-66, Chapter 2, Section
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
2-56.1 assists departments in timely procurement of commodities, services, and personal
property. Administrative controls are in place with the development of a special processing
form titled “Request for Purchases over $10,000” and each purchase request is reviewed and
approved by the Department Director, Purchasing Agent, and City Manager.
FI:
This Ordinance provides the impact of reducing paperwork by streamlining
ISCAL MPACT
processes within the organization. This allows administration to maintain internal controls for
these purchases, reduce the administrative overhead of processing for approval, and allow for
making more timely purchases.
A:
None
LTERNATIVES
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6. D
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-124 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
First Amendment to the Interlocal Agreement (ILA) between the City and the Board of County
Commissioners that authorized the City to receive funding as a partner in the continued planning and
implementation of the Youth Violence Prevention Program (YVPP) through September 30, 2010,
extending the term to December 31, 2010.
ER:
The original Interlocal Agreement (ILA) that provided funding for
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
the YVPP was available through the County’s Criminal Justice Commission (CJC) and expired
in September 30, 2009. Since no additional funding was available, the CJC was able to
secure ARRA (American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) through the Edward Byrne
Memorial Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) Program. This provided funding for the program
through September 30, 2010. However, the change in funding source and the transition of the
program from the Police Department to the Recreation & Parks Department caused a slight
delay in the implementation of the program this current fiscal year. Consequently, the
Providers who render the various programs that are part of the YVPP still have fund balance
available, which allows us to continue to offer the program through the end of December.
Accordingly, the ILA is being changed to extend the term to December 31, 2010.
H?
The amendment to the ILA will allow us to
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
continue to offer the YVPP program through December 31, 2010.
FI:
None. Funding for this program has already been approved. The
ISCAL MPACT
amendment to the ILA is simply for a time extension.
A:
Do not approve the amendment to the ILA.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION R09-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH,
FLORIDA, APPROVING AND AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO EXECUTE A FIRST AMENDMENT TO
INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH AND PALM BEACH COUNTY TO
CONTINUE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE YOUTH VIOLENCE
PREVENTION PROJECT UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND
PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners directed the Criminal
Justice Commission to develop a Youth Violence Prevention Program which would address the increase
in violent firearms crimes; and
WHEREAS
, the Criminal Justice Commission was able to secure funding through the Edward
Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance grant which funded the YVPP program through September 30,
2010; and
WHEREAS,
due to the change in funding source and the transition of the program from the
Police Department to the Recreation & Parks Department caused a slight delay in the implementation of
the program which allows the City to continue to offer the program through the end of December, 2010;
and
WHEREAS,
the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach upon recommendation of staff,
deems it to be in the best interest of the citizens of the City of Boynton Beach to approve and authorize
the City Manager to execute a First Amendment to the Interlocal Agreement with Palm Beach County to
continue implementation of the Youth Violence Prevention Program in the City of Boynton Beach
through December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
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Section 2. Upon recommendation of staff, this Commission does hereby authorize execution
of a First Amendment to the Interlocal Agreement between the City of Boynton Beach and Palm Beach
County to continue implementation of the Youth Violence Prevention Program in the City of Boynton
Beach through December 31, 2010, a copy of said First Amendment is attached hereto and made a part
hereof as Exhibit “A”.
Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
_____________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
_____________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
_____________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_____________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_____________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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6. E
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION N0. R10-125 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with Sandra Watson - Sister to Sista's Young Ladies Mentoring
and Enrichment Program (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention Project
(YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-64) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend service agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND SANDRA WATSON,
FACILITATOR FOR SISTER TO SISTA’S YOUNG LADIES
MENTORING AND ENRICHMENT PROGRAM, TO EXTEND
THE TERM TO DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND PROVIDING AN
EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Sandra Watson, Facilitator for Sister to Sista’s Young Ladies
mentoring and Enrichment Program; and
WHEREAS
, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Sandra Watson, Facilitator for Sister to Sista’s Young Ladies mentoring and
Enrichment Program extending the term of the Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the
Addendum to Service Agreement is attached hereto and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
56 of 408
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
57 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
Sandra Watson, Facilitator for Sister to Sista’s Young Ladies Mentoring and Enrichment
Program, with an address of 1174 Willow Road, West Palm Beach, FL 33406,
hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
1.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-64 is amended as set forth below.
2.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
58 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
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WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Sandra Watson, Facilitator
_________________ Sister to Sista’s Young Ladies
Mentoring and Enrichment Program
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
60 of 408
6. F
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-126 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with RM Lee, Community Development Center, 900 N. Seacrest
Blvd., Boynton Beach, Florida, 33435 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention
Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to December 31,
2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-69) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND RM LEE COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT CENTER, INC., INC., TO EXTEND THE TERM
TO DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE
DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with RM Lee Community Development Center, Inc; and
WHEREAS
, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with RM Lee Community Development Center, Inc., extending the term of the
Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service Agreement is attached hereto
and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
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______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
63 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
RM Lee, Community Development Center, Inc., with an address of 900 N. Seacrest
Blvd., Boynton Beach, FL 33435, hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
3.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-69 is amended as set forth below.
4.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
64 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
65 of 408
WITNESSES: RM Lee Community Development Center, Inc
_________________ BY:__________________________
______________________
_________________ (Print Name)
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
66 of 408
6. G
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-127 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with Tevis Gardenhire, Art is Motivation (AIM), 1118 S. Monterey
Circle, Boynton Beach, Florida, 33436 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention
Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to December 31,
2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-65) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
67 of 408
RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND TEVIS GARDENHIRE,
FACILITATOR FOR ART IS MOTIVATION, TO EXTEND THE
TERM TO DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND PROVIDING AN
EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Tevis Gardenhire, Facilitator for Art is Motivation; and
WHEREAS
, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Tevis Gardenhire, Facilitator for Art is Motivation extending the term of the
Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service Agreement is attached hereto
and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
68 of 408
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
69 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
Tevis Gardenhire, Facilitator for Art is Motivation (AIM), with an address of 1118 S.
Monterey Circle, Boynton Beach, FL 33436, hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
5.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-65 is amended as set forth below.
6.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
70 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
71 of 408
WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Tevis Gardenhire, Facilitator
_________________ Art is Motivation
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
72 of 408
6. H
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-128 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with Greg Russ, Russo Consulting Group Inc., 10727 Palm
Springs Drive, Boca Raton, Florida, 33428 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to
December 31, 2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-66) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
73 of 408
RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND GREG RUSSO, RUSSO
CONSULTING GROUP, INC., TO EXTEND THE TERM TO
DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Greg Russo, Russo Consulting Group, Inc; and
WHEREAS
, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Greg Russo, Russo Consulting Group, Inc., extending the term of the
Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service Agreement is attached hereto
and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
74 of 408
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
75 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
Greg Russ, Russo Consulting Group Inc., with an address of 10727 Palm Springs Drive,
Boca Raton, FL 33428, hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
7.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-66 is amended as set forth below.
8.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
76 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
77 of 408
WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Greg Russo
_________________ Russo Consulting Group, Inc.
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
78 of 408
6. I
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-129 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with Gary Davis, Art of Film Making Audio Visual Life Skills, 5056
Lantana Road, Unit 4205, Lake Worth, Florida, 33463 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth
Violence Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010
to December 31, 2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-67) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
79 of 408
RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND GARY DAVIS,
FACILITATOR FOR ART OF FILM MAKING AUDIO/VISUAL
LIFE SKILLS, TO EXTEND THE TERM TO DECEMBER 31, 2010;
AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Gary Davis, Facilitator for Art of Film Making Audio/Visual Life
Skills; and
WHEREAS
, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Gary Davis, Facilitator for Art of Film Making Audio/Visual Life Skills
extending the term of the Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service
Agreement is attached hereto and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
80 of 408
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
81 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
Gary Davis, Facilitator, Art of Film Making Audio/Visual Life Skills., with an address of
5056 Lantana Road, Unit 4205, Lake Worth, FL 33463, hereinafter referred to as
"PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
9.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-67 is amended as set forth below.
10.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
82 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
83 of 408
WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Gary Davis, Facilitator for
_________________ Art of Film Making Audio/Visual Life Skils
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
84 of 408
6. J
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-130 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
addendum to the Services Agreement with Richard Brochu, Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs, 7067
Peninsula Court, Lake Worth, Florida, 33467 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence
Prevention Project (YVPP), by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to
December 31, 2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an ILA that allowed the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the planning and
implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from October 1, 2009
through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays, the program did
not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still available to continue
offering the program till December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-68) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date executed by
the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
85 of 408
RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND RICHARD BROCHU,
FACILITATOR FOR HOOKED ON FISHING NOT ON DRUGS,
TO EXTEND THE TERM TO DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND
PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Richard Brochu, Facilitator for Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs; and
WHEREAS, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Richard Brochu, Facilitator for Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs extending
the term of the Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service Agreement is
attached hereto and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
86 of 408
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
87 of 408
ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
Richard Brochu, Facilitator for Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs, with an address of
7067 Peninsular Court, Lake Worth, FL 33467, hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
11.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-68 is amended as set forth below.
12.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
88 of 408
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
89 of 408
WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Richard Brochu, Facilitator for
_________________ Hooked on Fishing Not on Drugs
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
90 of 408
6. K
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-131 - Approve the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
th
addendum to the Services Agreement with Kayla Lundy, Success Teens, 1695 W. 26 Street, Riviera
Beach, Florida, 33404 (the "Provider"), which is part of the Youth Violence Prevention Project (YVPP),
by extending the term of the agreement from September 30, 2010 to December 31, 2010
ER:
The YVPP program was originally funded by the County through
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
an Inter Local Agreement allowing the City to be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the
planning and implementation of the YVPP program, up to the amount of $279,900 from
October 1, 2009 through September 30, 2010. However, due to some administrative delays,
the program did not actually begin till late January, 2010. Consequently, funds are still
available to continue offering the program until December 31, 2010.
The original Services Agreement with the Provider (Resolution No. R10-70) was ratified at the
June 1, 2010 Commission Meeting. Item #3 of the Agreement reads as follows:
TERM. The term of the engagement under this Agreement shall commence on the date
executed by the later of Provider and City and shall continue until September 30, 2010.
This needs to be changed to December 31, 2010.
H?
This will allow us to extend the program
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
through the end of the year.
FI:
None, no additional funds are necessary.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not amend services agreements for the YVPP Providers.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK TO
EXECUTE AN ADDENDUM TO YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
CENTER SERVICES AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AND KAYLA LUNDY,
FACILITATOR FOR SUCCESS TEENS, TO EXTEND THE TERM
TO DECEMBER 31, 2010; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE
DATE.
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach has entered into an agreement with the Board of County
Commissioners, Palm Beach County, Florida for the concept of developing a Youth Empowerment
Center to curtail violent and criminal behavior by providing holistic activities geared toward improving
the livelihood of the participants; and
WHEREAS
, on June 1, 2010, the City of Boynton Beach approved a Services Agreement for
Youth Empowerment Center with Kayla Lundy, Facilitator for Success Teens; and
WHEREAS, due to some administrative delays, the program did not begin as contemplated and
therefore the term of the Agreement is being extended to December 31, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
and authorize the City Manager and City Clerk to execute an Addendum to Youth Empowerment Center
Services Agreement with Kayla Lundy, Facilitator for Success Teens extending the term of the
Agreement until December 31, 2010, a copy of the Addendum to Service Agreement is attached hereto
and made a part hereof as Exhibit “A”
Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
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______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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ADDENDUM TO SERVICES AGREEMENT FOR
Youth Empowerment Center
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
th
Kayla Lundy, facilitator for Success Teens, with an address of 1695 W. 26 St., Riviera
Beach, FL 33404, hereinafter referred to as "PROVIDER".
WITNESSETH:
13.The Agreement between the CITY and the PROVIDER approved by the City Commission on
June 1, 2010, via Resolution R10-70 is amended as set forth below.
14.All other terms and conditions of the Agreement not specifically amended shall remain in full
force and effect for the balance of the term of the agreement.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and DEVELOPER agree as follows:
3
The PROVIDER does accept the term of the engagement shall continue until December
31, 2010.
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IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that
the instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
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WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
Kayla Lundy, Facilitator for
Success Teens
_________________
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Agreement for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
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6. L
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Approve adjusting the value of the authorization for the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
direct purchase of 36-inch diameter pipe supplies from Ferguson Enterprises, Inc., upward from
$844,467.80 (as approved on July 20, 2010) to $884,999.85; as required for the Wellfield Interconnect
Project-Section A.
ER:
On August 20, 2010, the City Commission authorized the direct
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
purchase of pipe materials from Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. as part of the Wellfield
Interconnect- Section A project. The direct purchase encompassed two types of piping;
namely (1) a push-on bell and spigot type, and (2) a restrained joint bell and spigot type.
Further in-depth analysis (attached), conducted prior to installation, revealed that a lesser
quantity of push-on pipe and a greater quantity of restrained joint pipe is required. This is to
insure that the pipe is properly restrained against thrust forces over its entire length.
As the pricing for these types of pipe differ, the total approved authorization must be increased
to cover the net difference in the cost of the pipe. An itemization of piping quantities and their
unit cost is attached. Five specially fabricated sections of pipe with tangential outlets (to
accommodate air-release assemblies) have also been added to the order. The net increase in
cost to the City is $ 40,532.05.
H?
No effect.
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
The total cost for piping materials associated with this project is available in
ISCAL MPACT
account 404-5000-590.96-01 (WTR136)
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A:
None. The appropriate type of pipe must be installed in the proper place, in
LTERNATIVES
order for this project to function properly and reliably. Substituting the push-on pipe for the
restrained joint pipe is not an option.
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6. M
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Approve full release of surety for the project known as K-
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Mart Expansion - Boynton West Shopping Center, and authorize refunding the $61,000 cash surety to
K-Mart Corporation.
ER:
This project involved the re-routing of existing utility lines in
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
anticipation of a building expansion. All lines have been installed, and have performed
adequately. A new utilities easement has been dedicated and recorded.
The cash refund of $61,000 should be returned to:
Development Manager
K-Mart Corporation, International Headquarters
3100 West Big Beaver Road
Troy, MI 48084-3163
H?
No affect.
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
None
ISCAL MPACT
A:
None
LTERNATIVES
City Manager Comment: This parcel is outside the City limits but is located within the City’s
utility service area.
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RETURN CHECK TO DEPT.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
DIRECT PAYMENT REQUISITION
Please issue a check in the amount of$ 61,000.00.
TO: Kmart Corporation
International Headquarters
3100 West Big Beaver Beaver Road
Troy, MI 48084-3163
FOR:Full release of cash surety for the project known as Kmart Expansion
Commission Approval:
Requested By: Peter Mazzella, Deputy Utilities Director Date: September 3, 2010
Approvals:
FUND DEPTBASIC ELEOBJAMOUNT
401 0000 220 99 00 61,000.00
Div Head
Finance Dept.
City Manager
61,000.00
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6. N
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Approve the updated Library Long Range Plan for 2010-
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
2013.
ER:
The State requires that each year, the City Commission formally
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
approve the Library Long Range Plan in order to be eligible to apply for State Aid Grants. This
plan is a three-year rolling plan that is updated each year by Library Administration and
approved by City Commission.
H?
Approval will qualify the Library to apply
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
for State Aid Grants. This plan does not commit the City to any additional budgetary
commitments other than what is addressed in the Technology section and is already requested
in the FY2010-2011 Budget Request.
FI:
State Aid Grants bring additional library resources to the community
ISCAL MPACT
(estimated at $53,707 for FY10-11). The Technology Plan expenses are all addressed in
existing budget request. No additional funds are included nor requested in this plan.
A:
Do not approve and eliminate the Library from the State Aid Grant Program.
LTERNATIVES
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6. O
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-132 - Approve an
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
application and agreement for Library State Aid To Public Libraries Grant for FY2010-2011.
ER:
The State requires that each year, the City Commission authorize
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
the Grant Application and Agreement for State Aid to Public Libraries. Final grant award is
based on FY2008-2009 City of Boynton Beach funds expended for Library Services
($2,470,531). Final grant award, which is estimated to be $53,707, will be announced in
February 2011 and is based on State Legislature approval of State Aid Fund allocation to
libraries in the State of Florida.
H?
Approval will qualify the Library to receive
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
a State Aid Grant which is an incentive program designed to encourage communities to
provide adequate local funding to support library service. These grant funds will help purchase
future library technology equipment.
FI:
State Aid Grants are operational grants that bring additional library resources
ISCAL MPACT
to the community. Grants formulas are based on local funds invested in library service. The
more local money spent on Library Services, the higher the grant amounts.
A:
Do not approve and eliminate the Library from the State Aid Grant Program.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION NO. R 10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND
AUTHORIZING EXECUTION OF THE LIBRARY STATE AID
GRANT APPLICATION AND AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH AND FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF
STATE, DIVISION OF LIBRARY AND INFORMATION
SERVICES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2010-2011; AND
PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
the State of Florida requires that the City of Boynton Beach authorize the Grant
Application and Agreement for Library State Aid each year; and
WHEREAS
, upon recommendation of staff, the City Commission has determined that it is in
the best interests of the residents of the City to authorize execution of the Library State Aid Grant
Application and Agreement with the Florida Department of State, Division of Library and Information
Services for the Fiscal Year 2010-2011.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby
authorize execution of the Library State Aid Grant Application and Agreement with Florida Department
of State, Division of Library and Information Services for the Fiscal Year 2010-2011, a copy of which is
attached hereto as Exhibit “A”.
Section 3. This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
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______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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6. P
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21. 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-133 - Approve a
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
three-year Processing Agreement between SUN RECYCLING, LLC ("SUN"), 790 Hillbrath Drive,
Lantana, FL and the City of Boynton Beach ("CITY") to allow the City to transfer recycling material
including yard waste, mixed recyclables and construction and demolition debris to the Sun Processing
Facility allowing for tracking of material at a lower cost per ton.
CP:
October 1, 2010 to September 30, 2012, provision for two (2) additional
ONTRACT ERIOD
three (3) year renewals.
ER:
SUN owns and operates solid waste processing centers and
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
transfer stations; two of the processing centers being located in Palm Beach County. The
processing facilities process, recycle, and market recycled solid waste products using
advanced technology. SUN facility at Lantana is fully permitted and licensed by the Solid
Waste Authority of Palm Beach County (“SWA”), the Palm Beach County Health Department,
and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and will receive construction and
demolition debris from the CITY as defined in Chapter 403, Part IV, Florida Statutes. The foregoing shall
also include yard waste and mixed recyclables generated by the CITY. SUN estimates that they can
process up to seventy percent of our bulk debris. SUN will provide the CITY with the necessary
documentation to support the State’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)
certification for CITY projects so designated.
SUN Recycling is the only local processing facility in the surrounding area that will except our
bulk trash material i.e., wood, plastic, metal, etc. and provide the LEED certification needed for
reporting recycling activity to the State (see attached letter from SUN Recycling).
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H?
Currently the Solid Waste Division is
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
taking only construction and demolition debris to the SUN Recycling site. By entering into this
agreement the Solid Waste Division will be able to utilize this site for additional recycling
materials including yard waste and mixed recyclables. This processing center is available to
the City to allow it to reach its recycling goals and those required by Chapter 403, Part IV,
Florida Statutes, including but not limited to the long term goal (2020) of the CITY to reduce
the amount of recyclable solid waste disposed of by a statewide average of at least 75 percent.
FI:
Using this facility will save the CITY $3.00 per ton as compared to what we are
ISCAL MPACT
currently being charged by the Solid Waste Authority for recycling material. This is a savings
of $32,400 per year.
The recommended Agreement is for October 1, 2010 thru September 30, 2013, charged to budget
line 431-2515-534-34-62 with an estimated expenditure of $ 327,600 per year. If this same material
was taken to the Solid Waste Authority transfer site it would be at a cost of $352,800 per year.
A:
Not to approve the agreement and risk the benefits of the recycling program.
LTERNATIVES
This would impede meeting the City’s State mandated goal of forty percent by December of
2012.
.
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RESOLUTION NO. R 10 -
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND AUTHORIZING
THE CITY MANAGER TO EXECUTE A THREE YEAR PROCESSING
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH AND
SUN RECYCLING, LLC., TO ALLOW THE CITY TO TRANSFER
RECYCLING MATERIAL ALLOWING FOR TRACKING OF
MATERIAL AT A LOWER COST PER TON, IN AN ESTIMATED
EXPENDITURE OF $327,600.00 PER YEAR; AND PROVIDING AN
EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
currently the Solid Waste Division is taking only construction and demolition
debris to the Sun Recycling site however it is available for additional recycling materials including yard
waste and mixed recyclables; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida , upon the
recommendation of staff, deems it to be in the best interests of the City residents to enter into a
Processing Agreement with Sun recycling, LLC., to allow the City to transfer recycling materials
including yard waste, mixed recyclables and construction and demolition debris to the Sun Processing
Facility allowing for tracking material at a lower cost per ton.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1.
The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2.
The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby
authorize and direct the City Manager to execute a Service Agreement between the City of Boynton
Beach and Sun recycling, LLC., to allow the City to transfer recycling materials including yard waste,
mixed recyclables and construction and demolition debris to the Sun Processing Facility allowing for
tracking material at a lower cost per ton for an estimated annual expenditure of $327,600.00, a copy of
said Agreement is attached hereto as Exhibit “A.”
Section 3.
This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
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PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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6. Q
CONSENT AGENDA
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-134 - Approve an
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
agreement with Mangrove Employer Services to provide COBRA Administrative services, to assist the
City as Plan Sponsor in complying with certain Federal requirements regarding the City's welfare benefit
health plans including Medical, Dental and Vision.
ER:
Mangrove Employer Services, Inc. would replace the current
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
COBRA Administration provider, Ceridian. Mangrove would assist the City as Plan Sponsor in
complying with requirements of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code) and the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA) that pertain to the continuation
of health benefits coverage regulated by the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconcilation Act of 1986,
as amended (COBRA) and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA).
The City’s benefit consultant, Willis of Florida requested quotes for COBRA Administration with
the ability to provide HIPAA certifications at the end of COBRA. Of the three (3) quotes
received (Exhibit 1), Mangrove was selected based on their scope of services and competitive
proposal.
Approval is requested for the COBRA Administration Agreement (Exhibit 2). Mangrove’s
Agreement is for an initial three (3) year term. The Agreement will automatically renew for
successive one (1) year terms unless cancelled by either party in accordance with the
Agreement.
H?
There will be little impact to City programs
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
or services. The City will notify the employees of the change in vendors.
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FI:
For FY10/11, an Administrative Fee of $0.45 per insured per month will be
ISCAL MPACT
funded in account 001-1610-513-49-17, Other Contractual Services. Fees are estimated to be
$426.60 per month ($5,120. annually). There is no charge for HIPAA certifications for a period
of 24 months.
A:
Select Infinisource and pay $9,670 annually or Ceridian that does not provide
LTERNATIVES
HIPAA certifications at the end of COBRA.
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RESOLUTION NO. R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
APPROVING A COBRA ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AGREEMENT WITH
MANGROVE BENEFIT SERVICES, INC., TO PROVIDE COBRA
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND ASSIST THE CITY AS PLAN SPONSOR
REGARDING THE CITY’S WELFARE BENEFIT HEALTH PLANS;
.
PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE
WHEREAS,
the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach desires to authorize the City
Manager to execute a COBRA Administrative Agreement with Mangrove Benefit Services, Inc., to
provide COBRA Administrative Services and assist the City as Plan Sponsor in complying with certain
Federal requirements regarding the City’s welfare benefit health plans including Medical, Dental and
Vision.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT
:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
authorize the City Manager to execute a COBRA Administrative Agreement with Mangrove Benefit
Services, Inc., to provide COBRA Administrative Services and assist the City as Plan Sponsor in
complying with certain Federal requirements regarding the City’s welfare benefit health plans including
Medical, Dental and Vision.
.
Section 3. This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage
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PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_____________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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7. A
BIDS AND PURCHASES OVER $100,000
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-135 - Approve
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Addendum to Construction Services Agreement with B&B Underground Contractors, Inc. to exceed the
authorized project amount of $2,466,047.87 by an additional $27,749.61 for the S.E. 4th Street Water
Main, Stormwater and Roadway Improvement Project for a final project total of $2,493,797.48.
ER:
On April 21, 2009, the City Commission authorized the execution
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
of a contract with B&B Underground Contractors, Inc. (B&B) to construct potable water main,
TH
reclaimed water main, stormwater and roadway improvements on SE 4 Street in the amount
of $2,241,861.70 plus a 10% contingency of $224,186.17, resulting in an original funding
amount of $2,466,047.87.
Of the $224,186.17 approved contingency, during the course of the project, $210,003.00 was
spent to address unforeseen conditions as discovered during construction.
The $210,003.00 was documented on a total of twenty-one (21) Field Change Directives
(FCDs) issued by the City. The attached FCD log provides the details for each approved
change. Additionally, these 21 FCDs also granted a total time extension of 27 calendar days.
Some of the challenges encountered on the project that required the issuance of FCDs
included additional water and reclaimed water connections, future service connections,
uncharted underground utilities, the need for conflict structures (between existing sewer
laterals and the new exfiltration trench), additional signage and grade changes.
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The following is a timeline of the executed FCDs:
FCD
No. 6/29/09 $4,000.00
1
FCD
7/13/09 $4,836.00
No.
2
FCD
No. 8/4/09 $17,108.00
3
FCD
8/4/09 $18,959.00
No.
4
FCD
No. VOID
$0.00
5
FCD
8/24/09 $26,385.00
No.
6
FCD
No. 8/24/09 $9,877.00
7
FCD
10/23/09 $35,725.00
No.
8
FCD
No. 11/5/09 $3,210.00
9
FCD
11/5/09 $2,341.00
No.
10
FCD
No. 11/5/09 $4,569.00
11
FCD
1/21/10 $14,200.00
No.
12
FCD
No. 1/21/10 $39,570.00
13
FCD
3/17/10 $4,752.00
No.
14
FCD
No. 3/17/10 $4,899.00
15
FCD
3/17/10 $3,105.00
No.
16
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FCD
No. 3/17/10 $3,439.00
17
FCD
3/17/10 $3,695.00
No.
18
FCD
No. 5/21/10 $1,377.00
19
FCD
5/21/10 $3,913.00
No.
20
FCD
No. 7/23/10 $2,205.00
21
FCD
7/23/10 $1,838.00
No.
22
TOTAL $210,003.00
Another use of the approved contingency was to pay for several key and substantial quantity
over runs on the Contractor’s pay items. The quantity over runs were due to inaccurate
quantities in the Engineer’s estimate and more “typical” items due to enhancements and
changes made during the actual construction that could not be foreseen by the Engineer.
The most significant over runs were:
Trench
$81,475.00
Repair
Concrete
$39,262.35
driveway aprons
Sidewalks $17,368.01
Tree
$3,000.00
removals
Tree
$6,000.00
removals
The total amount of the executed FCDs is $210,003.00, and the total amount of quantity over
runs is $124,463.60. However, the project deleted $67,380.85 due to the removal of the deep
TH
sewer tie-in on SE 6 Avenue. This reduced the net project over run to $57,082.75.
The Utilities Department recommends final payment in the amount of $175,633.99 in
accordance with the attached application for payment.
The final project accounting is as follows:
Reconciliation to close Purchase Order #091010
Original Purchase Order value $2,241,861.70
Approved contingency $224,186.17
Total Budget Appropriation $2,466,047.87
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Net – Exceeds total budget appropriation $27,749.61
Total Project Cost (including DOP) $2,493,797.48
H?
The project has been completed, resulting
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
in improved potable water, reclaimed water, stormwater management and surface
TH
improvements for our residents and business owners, and improved traffic control on SE 4
Street.
FI:
All monies are available in accounts #403-5006-590.65-02 (WTR 124), #403-
ISCAL MPACT
5006-590.65-09 (STM030), 403-5006-590.65-04 (SWR100) and 403-5006-590.65-11
(REU002).
A:
Since the work has been completed, there is no other alternative at this time.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING AND AUTHORIZING
EXECUTION BY THE CITY MANAGER AND CITY CLERK OF AN
ADDENDUM TO CONTRACT FOR CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
BETWEEN THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH AND B 7 B
UNDERGROUND CONTRACTORS, INC., REGARDING THE INCREASE
TH
IN FINAL PROJECT TOTAL FOR THE SOUTHEAST 4 STREET
WATER MAIN, STORMWATER AND ROADWAY IMPROVEMENT
PROJECT TO $2,493,797.48; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS
,on April 21, 2009, the City Commission authorized an agreement between the
City and B & B Underground Contractors, Inc., to perform water, stormwater and roadway
th
improvements for the Southeast 4 Street in the amount of $2,241,861.70 plus a 10% contingency of
$224,186.17, resulting in an original funding of $2,466,047.87; and
WHEREAS
, twenty-one Field Change Directives have caused the net project price to exceed
the approved contingency by $27,749.61; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida deems it in the
best interest of its residents and citizens to approve the Addendum to Contract for Construction
Services between the City of Boynton Beach and B & B Underground Contractors, Inc.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being
true and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby
authorize and approve execution by the City Manager and City Clerk of the Addendum to Contract
for Construction Services between the City of Boynton Beach and B & B Underground Contractors,
Inc., to increase the final project total to $42,493,797.48 regarding water, stormwater and roadway
th
improvements for the Southeast 4 Street, a copy of which Addendum is attached hereto as Exhibit
“A”.
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Section 3. This Resolution will become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this ___ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_____________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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ADDENDUM TO CONTRACT FOR
CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
This Addendum shall take effect on signature by both parties.
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter
referred to as "CITY",
and
B & B Underground Contractors, Inc., a Florida corporation, hereinafter referred to as
"CONTRACTOR".
WITNESSETH:
15.The Contract between the CITY and the CONTRACTOR entered into the 28th day of April,
2009 is amended as set forth below.
16.All other terms and conditions of the Contract not specifically amended shall remain in full force
and effect for the balance of the term of the Contract.
In consideration of the mutual terms and conditions, promises, covenants and payments
hereinafter set forth, CITY and CONTRACTOR agree as follows:
1.1.6
The total contract amount is amended from $2,466,047.87 for a final project total of
$2,493,797.48.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, the parties have set their hands and seals the day and year
first written above.
CITY
BY:____________________________
Kurt Bressner, City Manager
ATTEST: APPROVED AS TO FORM:
___________________ __________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC James A. Cherof, City Attorney
City Clerk
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STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared Kurt Bressner, as City Manager of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and
acknowledged he executed the foregoing Contract for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the
instrument is his act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_____________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
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B & B UNDERGROUND CONTRACTORS, INC.
WITNESSES:
_________________ BY:__________________________
_______________________
_________________ (Print Name)
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH
BEFORE ME, an officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowledgments,
personally appeared ____________________, and acknowledged he/she executed the foregoing
Contract for the use and purposes mentioned in it, and that the instrument is his/her act and deed.
IN WITNESS OF THE FOREGOING, I have set my hand and official seal at in the State
and County aforesaid on this ___ day of _______ 2010.
_______________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
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7. B
BIDS AND PURCHASES OVER $100,000
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-136 - Award the
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
"Two-Year Contract For Custodial Cleaning Services For Facilities", Bid #063-2511-10/JMA to JT Bay,
LLC d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group, of Tampa, Florida, in the amount of $223,533.84 plus a 10%
contingency for a total annual award amount of $245,887.22 for each year of the two (2) year contract.
CP:
October 1, 2010 to September 20, 2012, provision for two (2) additional
ONTRACT ERIOD
one (1) year renewals.
ER:
On August 17, 2010, Procurement Services opened and tabulated
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
thirteen (13) proposals. All proposals were reviewed by Procurement and the Public Works
Department, Facilities Management Division. References were checked (copy attached) and it
was determined that JT Bay, LLC d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group was the lowest, most
responsive, responsible bidder who met all specifications.
H?
The current custodial cleaning contract
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
th
will expire on September 30, 2010 which resulted in a request to bid for custodial services.
The cost requests for services were broken down by buildings and location throughout the
City, as well as desired frequency of service at those locations, in order to better quantify costs
for providing services as requested. This recommendation is consistent with the Public Works
Department operations budget submittal for FY 2010/11.
Over the past eight years, city staff has transitioned in an incremental basis towards full
contractual custodial services. It has been well documented that custodial services can be
provided contractually in a far more cost effective manner when compared to using in-house
custodial staff. As custodian vacancies arose over the years, we were able to further assign
custodial duties to contractors. This year, our custodial contract was due for renewal and
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bidding. As such, we asked bidders to provide costs to service the entire City, including those
areas cleaned by three City employees. The Facilities Management budget submittal included
full contractual services in the amount of $395,045.00. The proposed bid award for full
custodial services is $245,887.22. Bids were so favorable this year that the custodial budget
for FY 2010/11 is slightly over $300,000 less than FY 2009/10 when a combination of
contractual services and city staff were utilized.
Although Performance Cleaning Group has not had a historical presence in Palm Beach
County, they will service the City from their South Florida office in Hallandale Beach, just 30
minutes from Boynton Beach, staff believes that this will not be a hindrance to satisfactory
performance and compliance with Boynton Beach cleaning specifications.
Our specifications afford very defined punitive measures that can be implemented for non-
performance by the vendor. These measures include financial penalties based upon total
number of deficiencies in a specified area and within a specified timeframe (typically one
week). Furthermore, cancellation of the contract is an option for severe default.
FI:
The recommended annual bid award is $245,887.22 per year for October 1, 2010
ISCAL MPACT
thru September 30, 2012 with two one-year extension options. Costs do not include the parking garage,
which is cleaned by Forestry and Grounds staff, or any special services that were cut from the Facilities
Management FY2010-11 budget. Funds for custodial services are budgeted in Facilities Management
Division, line item 001-2511-519-34-10.
The following chart depicts the evolution of budgeted funds for custodial services in entirety
over the last five years:
CUSTODIAL COSTS –Budget Amounts
In-House Custodial
Includes, Salaries,
Benefits (30%) and Contractual Service
Operating Expenses Total
FY2005/2006 $269,400 $248,060 $517,460
1-Crew Supv.
4-Custodians
FY2006/2007 $293,943 $290,092 $584,035
1-Crew Supv.
4-Custodians
FY2007/2008 $184,844 $336,320 $521,164
1-Crew Supv. New Facilities
3-Custodians Added: Intracoastal
Clubhouse, Library
Expansion, Jaycee
Park, Sims Center
FY2008/2009 $201,286 $337,967 $539,253
1-Crew Supv.
2-Custodians
FY2009/2010 $200,579 $331,008 $531,587
1-Crew Supv. Added Fire Station
2-Custodians 5 Administration &
Eliminated 1-Deep
Cleaning @ each
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Fire Station
FY2010/2011 $0 $395,045 $395,045
A:
Provide all or a portion of custodial services with in-house staff. These
LTERNATIVES
alternatives are more costly and are not recommended.
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RESOLUTION NO. R 10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING THE AWARD OF THE
“TWO YEAR CONTRACT FOR CUSTODIAL CLEANING
SERVICES FOR FACILITIES” BID NO. 063-2511-10/JMA), TO JT
BAY, LLC., D/B/A PERFORMANCE CLEANING GROUP OF
TAMPA, FLORIDA, IN THE AMOUNT OF $223,533.84 PLUS A 10%
CONTINGENCY FOR A TOTAL ANNUAL AWARD OF $245,887.22;
AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR TO EXECUTE SAID CONTRACT;
AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS
, on August 17, 2010, Procurement Services received, opened and tabulated thirteen
(13) proposals; and
WHEREAS,
all proposals were reviewed by Procurement, Public Works Department, Facilities
Division and references were checked and it was determined that JT Bay, LLC., d/b/a Performance
Cleaning Group was the lowest, most responsive responsible bidder who met all specifications; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, upon recommendation of staff,
deems it to be in the best interests of the residents and citizens of the City of Boynton Beach to approve
the award of a Two-year Contract for Custodial Cleaning Services for Facilities” Bid #063-2511-
10/JMA to JT Bay, LLC., d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group of Tampa, Florida in the amount of
$223,533.84 plus a 10% contingency for a total annual award amount if $245,887.22 for each year of the
two year contract.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true and
correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, hereby approves the
award of a Two-year Contract for Custodial Cleaning Services for Facilities” Bid #063-2511-10/JMA to
JT Bay, LLC., d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group of Tampa, Florida in the amount of $223,533.84 plus
a 10% contingency for a total annual award amount if $245,887.22 for each year of the two year
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contract, and authorizes the Mayor to execute the Agreement between the parties, a copy of which is
attached hereto.
Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_____________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC,
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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AGREEMENT FOR
TWO-YEAR CONTRACT FOR CUSTODIAL SERVICES
FOR CITY FACILITIES
THIS AGREEMENT is entered into between the City of Boynton Beach, hereinafter referred to as “the
City”, and JT Bay, LLC d/b/a Performance Cleaning Group. hereinafter referred to as “the Contractor”,
in consideration of the mutual benefits, terms, and conditions hereinafter specified.
1. PROJECT DESIGNATION. The Contractor is retained by the City to perform custodial services
TWO-YEAR CONTRACT FOR CUSTODIAL SERVICES
in connection with the bid designated.
FOR CITY FACILITIES,Bid #063-2511-10/JMA.
2. SCOPE OF SERVICES. Contractor agrees to perform the services, identified on Exhibit “A”
attached hereto, including the provision of all labor, materials, equipment, and supplies.
3. TIME FOR PERFORMANCE. Work under this contract shall commence upon the giving of
written notice by the City to the Contractor to proceed. Contractor shall perform all services and
SEPTEMBER 30, 2012, with two, one (1)
provide all work required pursuant to this agreement until
year extensions if agreed upon by both parties
.
4. PAYMENT. The Contractor shall be paid by the City for completed work and for services
rendered under this agreement as follows:
a.Payment for the work provided by contactor shall be made as provided on exhibit “A” attached
hereto, provided that the total amount of payment to Contractor shall not exceed
$18,627.82
per month, without express written modification of the agreement signed by the City.
Final payment of any balance due the Contractor of the total contract price earned will be made
promptly upon its ascertainment and verification by the City after the completion of the work under this
agreement and its acceptance by the City.
Payment as provided in this section shall be full compensation for work performed, services rendered
and for all materials, supplies, equipment and incidentals necessary to complete the work as provided on
Exhibit “A”.
The Contractor’s records and accounts pertaining to this agreement are to be kept available for
inspection by representatives of the City and State for a period of three (3) years after final payments.
Copies shall be made upon request.
5. COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS. Contractor shall, in performing the services contemplated by
this service agreement, faithfully observe and comply with all federal, state and local laws, ordinances
and regulations that are applicable to the services to be rendered under this agreement.
6. INDEMNIFICATION. Contractor shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the City, its
offices, agents and employees, from and against any and all claims, losses or liability, or any portion
thereof, including attorneys fees and costs, arising from injury or death to persons, including injuries,
sickness, disease or death to Contractor’s own employees, or damage to property occasioned by a
negligent act, omission or failure of the Contractor.
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7. INSURANCE. The Contractor shall secure and maintain in force throughout the duration of this
contract comprehensive general liability insurance with a minimum coverage of $1,000,000 per
occurrence and $1,000,000 aggregate for personal injury; and $1,000,000 per occurrence/aggregate for
property damage, and professional liability insurance in the amount of $1,000,000 (see Attachment ‘A”).
8. INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. The Contractor and the City agree that the Contractor is an
independent contractor with respect to the services provided pursuant to this agreement. Nothing in this
agreement shall be considered to create the relationship of employer and employee between the parties
hereto. Neither Contractor nor any employee of Contractor shall be entitled to any benefits accorded
City employees by virtue of the services provided under this agreement. The City shall not be
responsible for withholding or otherwise deducting federal income tax or social security or for
contributing to the state industrial insurance program, otherwise assuming the duties of an employer
with respect to Contractor, or any employee of Contractor.
9. COVENANT AGAINST CONTINGENT FEES. The Contractor warrants that he has not
employed or retained any company or person, other than a bona fide employee working solely for the
Contractor, to solicit or secure this contract, and that he has not paid or agreed to pay any company or
person, other than a bona fide employee working solely for the Contractor, any fee, commission,
percentage, brokerage fee, gifts, or any other consideration contingent upon or resulting from the award
or making of this contract. For breach or violation of this warranty, the City shall have the right to
annul this contract without liability or, in its discretion to deduct from the contract price or
consideration, or otherwise recover, the full amount of such fee, commission, percentage, brokerage fee,
gift, or contingent fee.
10. DISCRIMINATION PROHIBITED. The Contractor, with regard to the work performed by it
under this agreement, will not discriminate on the grounds of race, color, national origin, religion, creed,
age, sex, or the presence of any physical or sensory handicap in the selection and retention of employees
or procurement of materials or supplies.
11. ASSIGNMENT. The Contractor shall not sublet or assign any of the services covered by this
agreement without the express written consent of the City.
12. NON-WAIVER. Waiver by the City of any provision of this agreement or any time limitation
provided for in this agreement shall not constitute a waiver of any other provision.
13. TERMINATION. The City reserves the right to terminate this contract without cause effective
thirty days from the date of the written notice.
Liability of the bidder for any and all such violation(s) shall not be affected by any such termination and
his surety as required by the bidding documents, shall be enforced for any additional cost incurred to
complete the annual contract.
In the event of the death of a member, partner or officer of the Contractor, or any of its supervisory
personnel assigned to this agreement, the surviving members of the Contractor hereby agree to complete
the work under the terms of this agreement, if requested to do so by the City. This section shall not be a
bar to renegotiations of this agreement between surviving members of the Contractor and the City, if the
city so chooses.
14. DISPUTES. Any dispute arising out of the terms or conditions of this agreement shall be
adjudicated within the courts of Florida. Further, this agreement shall be construed under Florida Law.
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15. NOTICES. Notices to the City of Boynton Beach shall be sent to the following address:
City of Boynton Beach
P.O. Box 310
Boynton Beach, FL 33425-0310
Attention: Paula Leblanc, Facilities Management Supervisor
Notices to Contractor shall be sent to the following address:
16. INTEGRATED AGREEMENT. This agreement, together with attachments or addenda,
represents the entire and integrated agreement between the City and the Contractor and supersedes all
prior negotiations, representations, or agreements written or oral. This agreement may be amended only
by written instrument signed by both city and Contractor.
DATED this _____ day of _______________________ 200__.
_________________________
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
___________________________ __________________________
Mayor Contractor
__________________________
Title
Attest/Authenticated:
___________________________ (Corporate Seal)
City Clerk
Approved as to Form: Attest/Authenticated:
___________________________ __________________________
Office of the City Attorney Secretary
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7. C
BIDS AND PURCHASES OVER $100,000
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
9/21/2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P UB
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSNFINISHED USINESS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 FAI
IDS AND URCHASES OVER UTURE GENDA TEMS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Award Field Change Directive No. 1 to Insituform
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Technologies, for the purpose of re-lining sewer mains at Cypress Creek in the amount of $103,450.12 ,
of which $47,070.92 is from the previously-authorized contingency.
Earlier this year, residents of the Cypress Creek community
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
informed the Department of their plans to resurface all of the private roadways within
that community, and inquired as to the reliability of all water and sewer main repairs
therein. The community members were concerned that any future failures in the utility
system, which required cutting of the resurfaced roadways, would leave unsightly
patches for years to come.
In reviewing this inquiry, the Department staff has determined that the water distribution
system has received significant remediation since the inception of the community, and
is now in reliable condition. Fortunately, the vitrified clay sewer system has been
recently televised by the City’s contractor, and eleven (11) line segments were
determined to be in need of rehabilitation. These line segments comprise a total of 412
linear feet of 12-inch diameter piping, and 2,473 linear feet of 8-inch diameter piping.
In order to complete the necessary
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
rehabilitation prior to the roadway resurfacing, the Department is requesting to add the
line segments to the existing contract with Insituform Technologies, employing the
same unit pricing contained in that contract, and resulting in a total anticipated cost of
$103,450.12 for this additional work. Of this amount, $56,379.17 is available in the
current base contract value, and the balance of $47,070.92 will be derived from the
Commission-approved contingency of $211,379.60.
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FI:
Funding is available in account number 403-5000-590.65-04 SWR 064 in the
ISCAL MPACT
$103,450.12
amount of
A:
The additional pipeline work could be re-scheduled and incorporated into a
LTERNATIVES
future pipeline project phase
City Manager Comment: The City’s Infiltration Inspection Program (I&I) consists of televising
segments of sanitary sewer systems. In this case, the age of the lines and the results of the
I&I study make this a good candidate for repair. Because the homeowner’s association
desires to resurface their internal street system this year, including the additional work at this
time makes sense.
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9. A
PUBLIC HEARING
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-022 - FIRST
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
READING - Approve Congress Middle School (ANEX 10-001) annexing a 0.95-acre property located at
st
the southern terminus of 31 Terrace S. Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
ER:
The subject parcel is one of the
Palm Beach County School District
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
two properties contained in an enclave located immediately north of the Congress Middle
School property. The annexation request is Plan’s annexation
consistent with the Comprehensive
objective, which emphasizes the annexation of enclaves, since it would result in the reduction
of the said enclave. The annexation of the subject parcel would incorporate it into the
remainder of the school property, which is already within the City’s boundaries. This would
facilitate future development plans for the property by allowing consistent application of the
City’s land development regulations.
The Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans for use of the property.
Staff recommends approval of this request. Palm Beach County has no objections and
encourages the city to pursue the annexation of the remaining parcel in the enclave. The
Planning and Development Board reviewed this request on August 24, 2010 and forwards it
with a recommendation for approval. Lastly, staff recommends that the two conditions that the
Board attached to the accompanying requests for land use amendment and rezoning be
instead attached to the subject annexation request. The conditions are as follows:
The City will amend the land use classification of the entire Congress Middle School
1.
property to reclassify it to Public and Private Governmental/Institutional (PPGI) for
consistency with the Public Usage (PU) zoning designation. The said amendment will
be considered for processing in one of the two 2011 amendment cycles; and
239 of 408
The Palm Beach County School District will bring the subject parcel under the Unity of
2.
Title with the remainder of the property.
Attaching conditions to a rezoning request may be interpreted as a “contract” or “conditional”
zoning, and as such is inconsistent with good zoning theory and practice. Likewise, conditions
are not usually attached to land use amendments. Moreover, if the Commission supports
condition #1, staff recommends that no time constraints be stipulated or, alternatively, that the
land use amendment specified in the subject condition be addressed, at the latest, as a part of
the amendments based on the Evaluation and Appraisal Report (EAR). The EAR for the city is
due in November 2012, and the subsequent amendments to the Comprehensive Plan must be
adopted within 18 months. The reason for this recommendation is the uncertainty regarding
the implications of the passing of Amendment 4 in November. Pursuant to Amendment 4, a
referendum would be required for a land use amendment, at a significant cost to the city.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not approve subject request leaving the parcel in Palm Beach County and the
LTERNATIVES
enclave at its current size.
S:\Planning\SHARED\WP\PROJECTS\PALM BEACH COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT\Congress Middle Annex\Agenda Cover Sheet 092110
240 of 408
ORDINANCE NO. 10-
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
ANNEXING 0.95+/- ACRE OF LAND THAT IS CONTIGUOUS TO THE CITY
LIMITS WITHIN PALM BEACH COUNTY AND THAT WILL, UPON
ANNEXATION, CONSTITUTE A REASONABLY COMPACT ADDITION TO
THE CITY BOUNDARIES; PROVIDING THAT THE PROPER LAND USE
DESIGNATION AND PROPER ZONING OF THE PROPERTY SHALL BE
REFLECTED IN SEPARATE ORDINANCES TO BE PASSED
SIMULTANEOUSLY HEREWITH; PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS,
SEVERABILITY, AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE; PROVIDING THAT THIS
ORDINANCE SHALL BE FILED WITH THE CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA, UPON ADOPTION.
WHEREAS,
the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Boynton Beach requires the development
of an Annexation Program; and
WHEREAS,
The School District of Palm Beach County, owner, by and through its agent,
Michael C. Owens, of the property more particularly described hereinafter, have heretofore filed a
Petition, pursuant to Section 9 of Appendix A-Zoning, of the Code of Ordinances, City of Boynton
Beach, Florida, for the purpose of annexing a certain tract of land consisting of approximately 0.05 +/-
acre; and
WHEREAS,
the City of Boynton Beach hereby exercises its option to annex the following tract
of land as hereinafter described, in accordance with Article I, Section 7 (32) of the Charter of the City
and Section 171.044, and 171.062(2), Florida Statutes; and
WHEREAS
, said tract of land lying and being within Palm Beach County is contiguous to the
existing city limits of the City of Boynton Beach, and will, upon its annexation, constitute a reasonably
compact addition to the City boundary.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. That each and every Whereas clause is true and correct.
241 of 408
Section 2. Pursuant to Article I, Section 7 (32) of the Charter of the City of Boynton Beach,
Florida and Section 171.044, Florida Statutes the following described unincorporated and contiguous
tract of land situated and lying and being in the County of Palm Beach, Florida, to wit:
LOT E, BLOCK 30, PALM BEACH FARMS CO. PLAT NO. 8, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGE 73, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
PALM BRACH COUNTY, FLORIDA.
SAID LANDS SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDAat
is hereby annexed to the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, and such land so annexed shall be and become
part of the City with the same force and effect as though the same had been originally incorporated in
the territorial boundaries thereof.
Section3: That Section 6 and 6(a) of the Charter of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, is
hereby amended to reflect the annexation of said tract of land more particularly described in Section 2 of
this Ordinance.
Section 4: That by Ordinances adopted simultaneously herewith, the proper City zoning
designation and Land Use category is being determined as contemplated in Section 171.162(2), Florida
Statutes.
Section 5. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
Section 6: Should any section or provision of this Ordinance or any portion thereof be declared
by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such decision shall not affect the remainder of this
Ordinance.
Section 7: This Ordinance shall not be passed until the same has been advertised for two (2)
consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, as
required by the City Charter and Section 171.044, Florida Statutes.
Section 8. This ordinance shall become effective immediately upon passage.
Section 9. This ordinance, after adoption, shall be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of
Palm Beach County, Florida.
242 of 408
FIRST READING this _____ day of _______________, 2010.
SECOND, FINAL READING and PASSAGE this _____ day of __________, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_______________________
Janet M. Prainito, CMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
243 of 408
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 10-054
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
THRU:Michael Rumpf
Planning and Zoning Director
FROM:Hanna Matras
Senior Planner
DATE:August 11, 2010
PROJECT NAME/NO: Congress Middle School / ANEX 10-001/LUAR 10-001
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (ANEX 10-001) annexing a 0.95 acre
st
property located at the southern terminus of 31. Applicant: Michael C.
Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) reclassifying subject
property from Palm Beach County’s IND (Industrial) to MoDR (Moderate
Density Residential). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) rezoning subject
property from Palm Beach County’s AR (Agricultural Residential) to PU
(Public Usage). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Property Owner/Applicant: The School District of Palm Beach County
Agent: Michael C. Owens
st
Location: West of southern terminus of 31 Terrace S., contiguous to the northern
boundary of the Congress Middle School at 101 S. Congress Avenue
(see Exhibit “A” – Location Map)
Existing Land Use/Zoning: Industrial (IND)/Agricultural Residential (AR), Palm Beach County
Proposed Land Use/Zoning: Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) / Public Usage (PU)
Proposed Use: No development plan at this time
Acreage: 0.95 acres
Adjacent Uses:
244 of 408
North: Developed property (warehouse / distribution), designated Industrial (IND)
and zoned Light Industrial District (IL), in Palm Beach County;
South: Congress Middle School, designated Moderate Density Residential
(MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU);
st
East: Congress Middle School to the southeast, southern terminus of 31
Terrace S to the northeast, and farther northeast, a developed
commercial property (Boynton Plaza), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned C-3, Community Commercial; and
West: Developed property (BJS Wholesale Club), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned Planned Commercial Development (PCD).
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Staff recommends that the requested annexation, land use amendment and rezoning be approved for
the following reasons:
1. The requested annexation meets the statutory requirements for municipal annexations
pursuant to Chapter 171, F.S.;
2. The request is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan’s annexation objective which
emphasizes the annexation of enclaves, and other relevant policies pertaining to
annexation and school siting; and
3. The requested land use classification and zoning designation for subject parcel is consistent
with the land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress
Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
BACKGROUND
Congress Middle School was built in 1976; in 2007, the Palm Beach County School District completed
a major site plan modification which included a new school building, gymnasium building and recreation
amenities. An addition to the school’s 38-acre property, the subject parcel was purchased by the
School District of Palm Beach County in 2008. The parcel is one of the two properties contained in an
enclave located immediately north of the school property.
The main part of the Congress Middle School site, located within the City’s boundary, is currently
classified Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU). This zoning
designation is inconsistent with the underlying land use classification since the only classification
consistent with the PU designation is the category of Public and Private Governmental/Institutional
(PPGI). However, it is also pertinent to note that a public school is a permitted use in both the MoDR
land use classification (public schools are allowed in all residential land use categories) and in the PU
zoning district.
The majority of the City’s public schools are classified PPGI and zoned PU. The exceptions are the
Citrus Cove Elementary on Lawrence Road, classified Low Density Residential (LDR) and zoned
R1AA, Single Family, and the Boynton Beach High School, located in Quantum Park, classified
Development of Regional Impact (DRI) and zoned Planned Industrial Development (PID).
245 of 408
Given the School District process for the subject request, it is not feasible to amend the land use
classification of the entire Congress Middle School property to reclassify it to PPGI at this time. Such
amendment would require a lenghty large-scale amendment process, taking up to six months. Staff is
planning to address this inconsistency by combining the said amendment with another large- scale
amendment in an appropriate amendment cycle.
Please note that the subject parcel’s current Industrial land use classification is also inconsistent with its
current zoning designation of “AR”. Even though a public school is a permitted use in the County’s
Industrial land use, it is not allowed in the AR zoning district. If the parcel is not annexed, its future
development for expansion of the school facilities would require a rezoning to a Light Industrial
designation and a conditional use permit, or, alternatively, both land use amendment and rezoning.
PROJECT ANALYSIS
Small Scale Amendment.
The parcel which is the subject of this request for annexation, land use
amendment, and rezoning totals approximately 41,243 square feet or 0.95 acre. Because of the size of
the property under consideration, the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA) classifies this
amendment as a “small scale” amendment. A “small-scale” amendment is adopted prior to forwarding
to the DCA, and is not reviewed for compliance with the state, regional and local comprehensive plans
prior to adoption.
The site is currently undeveloped, and the Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans
for improvements on the property.
Comprehensive Plan Consistency Review
. Pursuant to Section 9.C.2(2) of the Land Development
Regulations, staff is not required to review the petition against the eight (8) criteria by which rezonings
are to be reviewed as indicated in Section 9.C.7., as the proposed residential land land use
classification for the subject parcel is consistent with the Palm Beach County Comprehensive Plan,
Policy 2.2.8-a of the Future Land Use Element on Institutional and Public Facilities which encourages
the County to locate schools in proximity to urban residential areas by “considering schools as an
allowable use within all urban residential land use categories”. Moreover, the proposed land use and
zoning should be – and are - consistent with the land use classification and zoning designation of the
remainder of the Congress Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
Staff analysis below relates to consistency with relevant portions of the Comprehensive Plan and the
long-term capacity availability for public facilities.
Annexation.
1. The annexation of this parcel is consistent with annexation objectives and policies
within the comprehensive plan. Specifically, it will further Objectives 1.15 and 8.4 from the
Future Land Use and Intergovernmental Coordination elements through the reduction of an
enclave:
Objective 1.15: The City will continue to expand through annexation of enclaves,
pockets and other contiguous properties.
Objective 8.4 The City will continue to coordinate the annexation of enclaves, pockets
and other contiguous properties with Palm Beach County, contiguous municipalities and
any affected agencies
School Siting and Coordination with Palm Beach County School District
2. . The subject
request is consistent with City’s Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies of the Public
School Facilities, Intergovernmental Coordination and Future Land Use elements regarding
school siting and coordination with the Palm Beach County School District, including the
following:
246 of 408
Policy 8.17.1: The City Of Boynton Beach shall coordinate with the School District in
order to “Coordinate planning with the School District regarding population projections,
school siting, projections of development and redevelopment for the coming year,
infrastructure required to support school facilities and amendments to the future land use
plan element”
Long-Term Capacity Planning for Public Facilities.
3. Asstated in the “Background” section of
this report, the Congress Middle School underwent a major site plan modification in 2007. The
latest Draft Concurrency Table obtained by staff indicates that the school enrollment is projected
to increase from the current 922 to 997 in the school year 2014/2015. Moreover, the current
capacity utilization is only 64%, with a projected increase to 70%.
There are no improvements such as an increase of classroom space planned for the subject
site in foreseeable future, which would generate a significant impact on public facilities.
RECOMMENDATION
As indicated herein, staff has reviewed the proposed annexation, land use amendment and rezoning
and found it consistent with the Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies. Furthermore, the
requested land use classification and zoning designation for the subject parcel is consistent with the
land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress Middle School
property, located within the City’s boundary.
Therefore, staff recommends that the subject request be approved.
S:\Planning\SHARED\WP\PROJECTS\PALM BEACH COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT\Congress MS 2010\Congress Middle Annexation Staff
Report.doc
247 of 408
248 of 408
9. B
PUBLIC HEARING
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED ORDINANACE NO. 10-023 - FIRST
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
READING - Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) reclassifying land use designation of
subject property from Palm Beach County's IND (industrial) to MoDR (Moderate Density Residential.
Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
ER:
This is a request that accompanies the application for annexation
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
of the parcel, which is one of the two properties contained in
Palm Beach County School District
an enclave located immediately north of the Congress Middle School property. The request is
to reclassify the subject parcel to the MoDR land use category, which is consistent with the
land use classification of the remainder of the Congress Middle School property, located within
the City’s boundary.
The Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans for use of the property.
Staff recommends approval of this request. The Planning and Development Board reviewed
this request on August 24, 2010 and forwards it with a recommendation for approval, with the
following condition:
The City will amend the land use classification of the entire Congress Middle School
3.
property to reclassify it to Public and Private Governmental/Institutional (PPGI) for
consistency with the Public Usage (PU) zoning designation. The said amendment will
be considered for processing in one of the two 2011 amendment cycles.
Staff recommends that the above condition be instead attached to the annexation request for
the subject parcel. Moreover, if the Commission supports this condition, staff recommends that
no time constraints be stipulated or, alternatively, that the land use amendment specified in the
249 of 408
subject condition be addressed, at the latest, as a part of the amendments based on the
Evaluation and Appraisal Report (EAR). The EAR for the city is due in November 2012, and
the subsequent amendments to the Comprehensive Plan must be adopted within 18 months.
The reason for this recommendation is the uncertainty regarding the implications of the
passing of Amendment 4 in November. Pursuant to Amendment 4, a referendum would be
required for a land use amendment, at a significant cost to the city.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not approve subject request.
LTERNATIVES
250 of 408
ORDINANCE NO. 10-
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
AMENDING ORDINANCE 89-38 BY AMENDING THE FUTURE LAND
USE ELEMENT OF THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FOR A PARCEL
OWNED BY THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PALM BEACH COUNTY AND
ST
LOCATED WEST OF THE SOUTHERN TERMINUS OF 31 TERRACE
SOUTH, CONTIGUOUS TO THE NORTHERN BOUNDARY OF THE
CONGRESS MIDDLE SCHOOL AT 101 SOUTH CONGRESS AVENUE;
CHANGING THE LAND USE DESIGNATION FROM PALM BEACH
COUNTY INDUSTRIAL (IND) TO MODERATE DENSITY RESIDENTIAL
(MoDR); PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS, SEVERABILITY, AND AN
EFFECTIVE DATE
.
WHEREAS,
the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida has adopted a
Comprehensive Future Land Use Plan and as part of said Plan a Future Land Use Element pursuant
to Ordinance No. 89-38 and in accordance with the Local Government Comprehensive Planning
Act; and
WHEREAS,
the procedure for amendment of a Future Land Use Element of a
Comprehensive Plan as set forth in Chapter 163, Florida Statutes, has been followed; and
WHEREAS,
after two (2) public hearings the City Commission acting in its dual capacity as
Local Planning Agency and City Commission finds that the amendment hereinafter set forth is
consistent with the City’s adopted Comprehensive Plan and deems it in the best interest of the
inhabitants of said City to amend the aforesaid Element of the Comprehensive Plan as provided.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1: The foregoing WHEREAS clauses are true and correct and incorporated herein
by this reference.
Section 2: Ordinance No. 89-38 of the City is hereby amended to reflect the following:
That the Future Land Use of the following described land located atwest of the southern
st
terminus of 31 Terrace South, contiguous to the northern boundary of the Congress Middle School
at 101 South Congress Avenue; changing the land use designation from Palm Beach County
251 of 408
Industrial (IND) to Moderate Density Residential (MoDR):
LOT E, BLOCK 30, PALM BEACH FARMS CO. PLAT NO. 8, ACCORDING TO THE
PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGE 73, OF THE PUBLIC
RECORDS OF PALM BRACH COUNTY, FLORIDA.
SAID LANDS SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH,
PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA
CONTAINING APPROX. 41,243 SQUARE FEET / 0.95 ACRE, MORE OR LESS.
Section 3: That any maps adopted in accordance with the Future Land Use Element of the
Future Land Use Plan shall be amended accordingly.
Section 4: All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
Section 5: Should any section or provision of this Ordinance or any portion thereof be declared
by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such decision shall not affect the remainder of this
Ordinance.
Section 6: This Ordinance shall take effect on adoption, subject to the review, challenge, or
appeal provisions provided by the Florida Local Government Comprehensive Planning and Land
Development Regulation Act. No party shall be vested of any right by virtue of the adoption of this
Ordinance until all statutory required review is complete and all legal challenges, including appeals, are
exhausted. In the event that the effective date is established by state law or special act, the provisions of
state act shall control.
FIRST READING this _____ day of _______________, 2010.
SECOND, FINAL READING and PASSAGE this _____ day of ___________, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
____________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
____________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
_____________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
252 of 408
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_______________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
253 of 408
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 10-054
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
THRU:Michael Rumpf
Planning and Zoning Director
FROM:Hanna Matras
Senior Planner
DATE:August 11, 2010
PROJECT NAME/NO: Congress Middle School / ANEX 10-001/LUAR 10-001
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (ANEX 10-001) annexing a 0.95 acre
st
property located at the southern terminus of 31. Applicant: Michael C.
Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) reclassifying subject
property from Palm Beach County’s IND (Industrial) to MoDR (Moderate
Density Residential). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) rezoning subject
property from Palm Beach County’s AR (Agricultural Residential) to PU
(Public Usage). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Property Owner/Applicant: The School District of Palm Beach County
Agent: Michael C. Owens
st
Location: West of southern terminus of 31 Terrace S., contiguous to the northern
boundary of the Congress Middle School at 101 S. Congress Avenue
(see Exhibit “A” – Location Map)
Existing Land Use/Zoning: Industrial (IND)/Agricultural Residential (AR), Palm Beach County
Proposed Land Use/Zoning: Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) / Public Usage (PU)
Proposed Use: No development plan at this time
Acreage: 0.95 acres
Adjacent Uses:
254 of 408
North: Developed property (warehouse / distribution), designated Industrial (IND)
and zoned Light Industrial District (IL), in Palm Beach County;
South: Congress Middle School, designated Moderate Density Residential
(MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU);
st
East: Congress Middle School to the southeast, southern terminus of 31
Terrace S to the northeast, and farther northeast, a developed
commercial property (Boynton Plaza), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned C-3, Community Commercial; and
West: Developed property (BJS Wholesale Club), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned Planned Commercial Development (PCD).
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Staff recommends that the requested annexation, land use amendment and rezoning be approved for
the following reasons:
4. The requested annexation meets the statutory requirements for municipal annexations
pursuant to Chapter 171, F.S.;
5. The request is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan’s annexation objective which
emphasizes the annexation of enclaves, and other relevant policies pertaining to
annexation and school siting; and
6. The requested land use classification and zoning designation for subject parcel is consistent
with the land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress
Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
BACKGROUND
Congress Middle School was built in 1976; in 2007, the Palm Beach County School District completed
a major site plan modification which included a new school building, gymnasium building and recreation
amenities. An addition to the school’s 38-acre property, the subject parcel was purchased by the
School District of Palm Beach County in 2008. The parcel is one of the two properties contained in an
enclave located immediately north of the school property.
The main part of the Congress Middle School site, located within the City’s boundary, is currently
classified Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU). This zoning
designation is inconsistent with the underlying land use classification since the only classification
consistent with the PU designation is the category of Public and Private Governmental/Institutional
(PPGI). However, it is also pertinent to note that a public school is a permitted use in both the MoDR
land use classification (public schools are allowed in all residential land use categories) and in the PU
zoning district.
The majority of the City’s public schools are classified PPGI and zoned PU. The exceptions are the
Citrus Cove Elementary on Lawrence Road, classified Low Density Residential (LDR) and zoned
R1AA, Single Family, and the Boynton Beach High School, located in Quantum Park, classified
Development of Regional Impact (DRI) and zoned Planned Industrial Development (PID).
255 of 408
Given the School District process for the subject request, it is not feasible to amend the land use
classification of the entire Congress Middle School property to reclassify it to PPGI at this time. Such
amendment would require a lenghty large-scale amendment process, taking up to six months. Staff is
planning to address this inconsistency by combining the said amendment with another large- scale
amendment in an appropriate amendment cycle.
Please note that the subject parcel’s current Industrial land use classification is also inconsistent with its
current zoning designation of “AR”. Even though a public school is a permitted use in the County’s
Industrial land use, it is not allowed in the AR zoning district. If the parcel is not annexed, its future
development for expansion of the school facilities would require a rezoning to a Light Industrial
designation and a conditional use permit, or, alternatively, both land use amendment and rezoning.
PROJECT ANALYSIS
Small Scale Amendment.
The parcel which is the subject of this request for annexation, land use
amendment, and rezoning totals approximately 41,243 square feet or 0.95 acre. Because of the size of
the property under consideration, the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA) classifies this
amendment as a “small scale” amendment. A “small-scale” amendment is adopted prior to forwarding
to the DCA, and is not reviewed for compliance with the state, regional and local comprehensive plans
prior to adoption.
The site is currently undeveloped, and the Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans
for improvements on the property.
Comprehensive Plan Consistency Review
. Pursuant to Section 9.C.2(2) of the Land Development
Regulations, staff is not required to review the petition against the eight (8) criteria by which rezonings
are to be reviewed as indicated in Section 9.C.7., as the proposed residential land land use
classification for the subject parcel is consistent with the Palm Beach County Comprehensive Plan,
Policy 2.2.8-a of the Future Land Use Element on Institutional and Public Facilities which encourages
the County to locate schools in proximity to urban residential areas by “considering schools as an
allowable use within all urban residential land use categories”. Moreover, the proposed land use and
zoning should be – and are - consistent with the land use classification and zoning designation of the
remainder of the Congress Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
Staff analysis below relates to consistency with relevant portions of the Comprehensive Plan and the
long-term capacity availability for public facilities.
Annexation.
4. The annexation of this parcel is consistent with annexation objectives and policies
within the comprehensive plan. Specifically, it will further Objectives 1.15 and 8.4 from the
Future Land Use and Intergovernmental Coordination elements through the reduction of an
enclave:
Objective 1.15: The City will continue to expand through annexation of enclaves,
pockets and other contiguous properties.
Objective 8.4 The City will continue to coordinate the annexation of enclaves, pockets
and other contiguous properties with Palm Beach County, contiguous municipalities and
any affected agencies
School Siting and Coordination with Palm Beach County School District
5. . The subject
request is consistent with City’s Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies of the Public
School Facilities, Intergovernmental Coordination and Future Land Use elements regarding
school siting and coordination with the Palm Beach County School District, including the
following:
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Policy 8.17.1: The City Of Boynton Beach shall coordinate with the School District in
order to “Coordinate planning with the School District regarding population projections,
school siting, projections of development and redevelopment for the coming year,
infrastructure required to support school facilities and amendments to the future land use
plan element”
Long-Term Capacity Planning for Public Facilities.
6. Asstated in the “Background” section of
this report, the Congress Middle School underwent a major site plan modification in 2007. The
latest Draft Concurrency Table obtained by staff indicates that the school enrollment is projected
to increase from the current 922 to 997 in the school year 2014/2015. Moreover, the current
capacity utilization is only 64%, with a projected increase to 70%.
There are no improvements such as an increase of classroom space planned for the subject
site in foreseeable future, which would generate a significant impact on public facilities.
RECOMMENDATION
As indicated herein, staff has reviewed the proposed annexation, land use amendment and rezoning
and found it consistent with the Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies. Furthermore, the
requested land use classification and zoning designation for the subject parcel is consistent with the
land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress Middle School
property, located within the City’s boundary.
Therefore, staff recommends that the subject request be approved.
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9. C
PUBLIC HEARING
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
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RACC:
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-024 - FIRST
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
READING - Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) rezoning of the subject property from
Palm Beach County's AR (Agricultural Residential) to PU (Public Usage). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
ER:
This is a rezoning request that accompanies the application for
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
annexation and the request for a land use amendment for the
Palm Beach County School District
parcel, which is one of the two properties contained in an enclave located immediately north of
the Congress Middle School property. The request is to rezone the subject parcel to a PU
zoning designation, which is consistent with the zoning designation of the remainder of the
Congress Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
The Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans for use of the property.
Staff recommends approval of this request. The Planning and Development Board reviewed
this request on August 24, 2010 and forwards it with a recommendation for approval, with the
following condition:
The Palm Beach County School District will bring the subject parcel under the Unity of
4.
Title with the remainder of the property.
Staff recommends that the above condition be instead attached to the annexation request for
the subject parcel. The Palm Beach County School District supports this condition; the
applicant has informed staff that the Unity of Title process for the property has already been
initiated.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
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FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not approve subject request.
LTERNATIVES
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ORDINANCE NO. 10-
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH,
FLORIDA, REGARDING THE APPLICATION OF THE
SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PALM BEACH COUNTY,
AMENDING ORDINANCE 02-013 TO REZONE A PARCEL
OF LAND LOCATED WEST OF THE SOUTHERN
ST
TERMINUS OF 31 TERRACE SOUTH, CONTIGUOUS TO
THE NORTHERN BOUNDARY OF THE CONGRESS
MIDDLE SCHOOL AT 101 SOUTH CONGRESS AVENUE, AS
MORE FULLY DESCRIBED HEREIN, FROM PALM BEACH
COUNTY AGRICULTURAL RESIDENTIAL (AR) TO PUBLIC
USAGE (PU); PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS,
SEVERABILITY, AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE
.
WHEREAS,
the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida has adopted
Ordinance No. 02-013, in which a Revised Zoning Map was adopted for said City; and
WHEREAS,
Michael C. Owens, on behalf of the School District of Palm Beach County has filed
a petition on behalf of the owner to rezoning a parcel of land more particularly described hereinafter; and
WHEREAS,
the City Commission, following required notice, conducted a public hearing to
consider the rezoning and heard testimony and received evidence which the Commission finds supports a
rezoning for the property hereinafter described; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission finds that the proposed rezoning is consistent with the Land
Use described in the City’s Comprehensive Plan; and
WHEREAS,
the City Commission deems it in the best interests of the inhabitants of said City to
amend the aforesaid Revised Zoning Map as hereinafter set forth.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing Whereas clauses are true and correct and incorporated herein by
this reference.
st
Section 2. The following described land located atwest of the southern terminus of 31
Terrace South, contiguous to the northern boundary of the Congress Middle School at 101 South
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Congress Avenue, as more fully described herein, is hereby rezoned from Palm Beach County
Agricultural Residential (AR) to Public Usage (PU):
LOT E, BLOCK 30, PALM BEACH FARMS CO. PLAT NO. 8, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGE 73, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
PALM BRACH COUNTY, FLORIDA.
A location map is attached hereto as Exhibit “A” and made a part of this Ordinance by reference.
Section 3. That the Zoning Map of the City is amended to reflect this rezoning.
Section 4. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
Section 5. Should any section or provision of this Ordinance or any portion thereof be declared by a
court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such decision shall not affect the remainder of this
Ordinance.
Section 6. This ordinance shall become effective immediately upon passage.
FIRST READING this _____ day of _______________, 2010.
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SECOND, FINAL READING and PASSAGE this _____ day of ___________, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_____________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_______________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 10-054
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
THRU:Michael Rumpf
Planning and Zoning Director
FROM:Hanna Matras
Senior Planner
DATE:August 11, 2010
PROJECT NAME/NO: Congress Middle School / ANEX 10-001/LUAR 10-001
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (ANEX 10-001) annexing a 0.95 acre
st
property located at the southern terminus of 31. Applicant: Michael C.
Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) reclassifying subject
property from Palm Beach County’s IND (Industrial) to MoDR (Moderate
Density Residential). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
REQUEST: Approve Congress Middle School (LUAR 10-001) rezoning subject
property from Palm Beach County’s AR (Agricultural Residential) to PU
(Public Usage). Applicant: Michael C. Owens.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Property Owner/Applicant: The School District of Palm Beach County
Agent: Michael C. Owens
st
Location: West of southern terminus of 31 Terrace S., contiguous to the northern
boundary of the Congress Middle School at 101 S. Congress Avenue
(see Exhibit “A” – Location Map)
Existing Land Use/Zoning: Industrial (IND)/Agricultural Residential (AR), Palm Beach County
Proposed Land Use/Zoning: Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) / Public Usage (PU)
Proposed Use: No development plan at this time
Acreage: 0.95 acres
Adjacent Uses:
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North: Developed property (warehouse / distribution), designated Industrial (IND)
and zoned Light Industrial District (IL), in Palm Beach County;
South: Congress Middle School, designated Moderate Density Residential
(MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU);
st
East: Congress Middle School to the southeast, southern terminus of 31
Terrace S to the northeast, and farther northeast, a developed
commercial property (Boynton Plaza), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned C-3, Community Commercial; and
West: Developed property (BJS Wholesale Club), designated Local Retail
Commercial (LRC) and zoned Planned Commercial Development (PCD).
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Staff recommends that the requested annexation, land use amendment and rezoning be approved for
the following reasons:
7. The requested annexation meets the statutory requirements for municipal annexations
pursuant to Chapter 171, F.S.;
8. The request is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan’s annexation objective which
emphasizes the annexation of enclaves, and other relevant policies pertaining to
annexation and school siting; and
9. The requested land use classification and zoning designation for subject parcel is consistent
with the land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress
Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
BACKGROUND
Congress Middle School was built in 1976; in 2007, the Palm Beach County School District completed
a major site plan modification which included a new school building, gymnasium building and recreation
amenities. An addition to the school’s 38-acre property, the subject parcel was purchased by the
School District of Palm Beach County in 2008. The parcel is one of the two properties contained in an
enclave located immediately north of the school property.
The main part of the Congress Middle School site, located within the City’s boundary, is currently
classified Moderate Density Residential (MoDR) and zoned Public Usage (PU). This zoning
designation is inconsistent with the underlying land use classification since the only classification
consistent with the PU designation is the category of Public and Private Governmental/Institutional
(PPGI). However, it is also pertinent to note that a public school is a permitted use in both the MoDR
land use classification (public schools are allowed in all residential land use categories) and in the PU
zoning district.
The majority of the City’s public schools are classified PPGI and zoned PU. The exceptions are the
Citrus Cove Elementary on Lawrence Road, classified Low Density Residential (LDR) and zoned
R1AA, Single Family, and the Boynton Beach High School, located in Quantum Park, classified
Development of Regional Impact (DRI) and zoned Planned Industrial Development (PID).
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Given the School District process for the subject request, it is not feasible to amend the land use
classification of the entire Congress Middle School property to reclassify it to PPGI at this time. Such
amendment would require a lenghty large-scale amendment process, taking up to six months. Staff is
planning to address this inconsistency by combining the said amendment with another large- scale
amendment in an appropriate amendment cycle.
Please note that the subject parcel’s current Industrial land use classification is also inconsistent with its
current zoning designation of “AR”. Even though a public school is a permitted use in the County’s
Industrial land use, it is not allowed in the AR zoning district. If the parcel is not annexed, its future
development for expansion of the school facilities would require a rezoning to a Light Industrial
designation and a conditional use permit, or, alternatively, both land use amendment and rezoning.
PROJECT ANALYSIS
Small Scale Amendment.
The parcel which is the subject of this request for annexation, land use
amendment, and rezoning totals approximately 41,243 square feet or 0.95 acre. Because of the size of
the property under consideration, the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA) classifies this
amendment as a “small scale” amendment. A “small-scale” amendment is adopted prior to forwarding
to the DCA, and is not reviewed for compliance with the state, regional and local comprehensive plans
prior to adoption.
The site is currently undeveloped, and the Palm Beach County School District has no immediate plans
for improvements on the property.
Comprehensive Plan Consistency Review
. Pursuant to Section 9.C.2(2) of the Land Development
Regulations, staff is not required to review the petition against the eight (8) criteria by which rezonings
are to be reviewed as indicated in Section 9.C.7., as the proposed residential land land use
classification for the subject parcel is consistent with the Palm Beach County Comprehensive Plan,
Policy 2.2.8-a of the Future Land Use Element on Institutional and Public Facilities which encourages
the County to locate schools in proximity to urban residential areas by “considering schools as an
allowable use within all urban residential land use categories”. Moreover, the proposed land use and
zoning should be – and are - consistent with the land use classification and zoning designation of the
remainder of the Congress Middle School property, located within the City’s boundary.
Staff analysis below relates to consistency with relevant portions of the Comprehensive Plan and the
long-term capacity availability for public facilities.
Annexation.
7. The annexation of this parcel is consistent with annexation objectives and policies
within the comprehensive plan. Specifically, it will further Objectives 1.15 and 8.4 from the
Future Land Use and Intergovernmental Coordination elements through the reduction of an
enclave:
Objective 1.15: The City will continue to expand through annexation of enclaves,
pockets and other contiguous properties.
Objective 8.4 The City will continue to coordinate the annexation of enclaves, pockets
and other contiguous properties with Palm Beach County, contiguous municipalities and
any affected agencies
School Siting and Coordination with Palm Beach County School District
8. . The subject
request is consistent with City’s Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies of the Public
School Facilities, Intergovernmental Coordination and Future Land Use elements regarding
school siting and coordination with the Palm Beach County School District, including the
following:
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Policy 8.17.1: The City Of Boynton Beach shall coordinate with the School District in
order to “Coordinate planning with the School District regarding population projections,
school siting, projections of development and redevelopment for the coming year,
infrastructure required to support school facilities and amendments to the future land use
plan element”
Long-Term Capacity Planning for Public Facilities.
9. Asstated in the “Background” section of
this report, the Congress Middle School underwent a major site plan modification in 2007. The
latest Draft Concurrency Table obtained by staff indicates that the school enrollment is projected
to increase from the current 922 to 997 in the school year 2014/2015. Moreover, the current
capacity utilization is only 64%, with a projected increase to 70%.
There are no improvements such as an increase of classroom space planned for the subject
site in foreseeable future, which would generate a significant impact on public facilities.
RECOMMENDATION
As indicated herein, staff has reviewed the proposed annexation, land use amendment and rezoning
and found it consistent with the Comprehensive Plan objectives and policies. Furthermore, the
requested land use classification and zoning designation for the subject parcel is consistent with the
land use classification and zoning designation of the remainder of the Congress Middle School
property, located within the City’s boundary.
Therefore, staff recommends that the subject request be approved.
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10. A
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
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A/P UB
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ATURE F
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 FAI
IDS AND URCHASES OVER UTURE GENDA TEMS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-137 - Award for a
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
three year Towing Franchise RFP#055-2110-10/CJD to the top two ranked respondents for Towing and
Storage Services: Beck's Towing & Recovery, Inc. in the amount of $104,500 and Zuccala Wrecker
Service, Inc. in the amount of $100,075 for a total annual contract price of $204,575.00 and authorize the
City Manager to execute an agreement in a form deemed sufficient by the City Attorney.
ER:
At the April 20, 2010 City Commission meeting the City
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
Commission approved the issuance of an RFP for Towing and Storage Services. Based on
discussions of the Commission at this meeting, staff prepared an RFP outlining three bid
opportunities to which vendors may respond; 1) single award franchise agreement, 2)
franchise agreement with two vendors; and 3) franchise agreement with three vendors.
The RFP’s were due back on August 3, 2010. The City received responses from nine tow
vendors, all of which were deemed responsive to the bid. There was one “No Bid” submitted.
The bid tabulation sheet is attached (Exhibit 1).
A review committee of four staff members reviewed the bids. Those committee members were:
Tim Howard, Deputy Finance Director; Scott Blasie, Code Enforcement Administrator; Steve
Weiser, Fleet Manager and Sgt. Craig Anthony, Police Dept. A sub committee of three
The inspection reports are
members conducted on site inspections of each vendor.
attached (Exhibit 2).
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After careful review and consideration, the Tow RFP Review Committee is recommending the
City Commission award a three year contract utilizing Option #2 – (two vendor option) to the
The Review Committee’s Memo of Recommendation
top two respondents in this category.
and rankings is attached (Exhibit 3):
Beck’s Towing & Recovery, Inc. $104,500
Zuccala Wrecker Service, Inc. $100,075
Total contract value = $204,575
This award would generate an annual revenue of $204,575.00. The term of the agreement
shall run for a three (3) year term with the option to renew for two additional one year periods.
Implementation of the award is contingent on execution of a Franchise Towing Agreement, the
form of which must be approved by the City Attorney. In the event the parties cannot reach an
agreement, this award will be returned to the City Commission for further action.
H?
A two vendor contract would have a very
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
positive impact on the administration of our towing contract. Currently our Communications
personnel must keep track of six tow vendors for rotation of calls; a cumbersome and time
consuming task.
Additionally, the generation of income from this contract is certainly a positive consideration.
Anticipated revenue based on Option #2 is $204,575.
FI:
This contract will generate an annual revenue of $204,575 in the general fund
ISCAL MPACT
operating budget.
A:
Award a different option contract; not award a contract; maintain status quo
LTERNATIVES
with six tow vendors on rotation.
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RESOLUTION NO. R 10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, APPROVING THE AWARD OF A
THREE YEAR TOWING FRANCHISE RFP #055-2110-10/CJD TO
THE TOP TWO RANKED RESPONDENTS FOR TOWING AND
STORAGE SERVICES: BECK’S TOWING & RECOVERY, INC., IN
THE AMOUNT OF $104,500.00 AND ZUCCALA WRECKER
SERVICE, INC., IN THE AMOUNT OF $100,075.00 FOR A TOTAL
ANNUAL CONTRACT PRICE OF $204,575.00; AUTHORIZING THE
CITY MANAGER AN AGREEMENT IN A FORM ACCEPTABLE TO
THE CITY ATTORNEY; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS
, on August 3, 2010 the City received and opened nine responses from tow
vendors, all of which were deemed responsive to the bid; and
WHEREAS
, an evaluation of proposals was conducted and the Tow RFP Committee is
recommending the City Commission award a three year contract utilizing Option #2 to the top two
respondents which were Beck’s Towing & Recovery, Inc., and Zuccala Wrecker Service, Inc; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, upon recommendation of
staff, deems it to be in the best interests of the residents and citizens of the City of Boynton Beach to
approve the award of a three-year tow franchise RFP #055-2110-10/CJD to Beck’s Towing &
Recovery, Inc., in the amount of $104,500.00 and to Zuccala Wrecker Service, Inc., in the amount of
$100,075.00 for a total annual contract price of $204,575.00.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being
true and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida, hereby approves
the award of a three-year tow franchise RFP #055-2110-10/CJD to Beck’s Towing & Recovery, Inc.,
in the amount of $104,500.00 and to Zuccala Wrecker Service, Inc., in the amount of $100,075.00
for a total annual contract price of $204,575.00 and authorizes the City Manager to execute an
Agreement for Vehicle Towing in a form acceptable to the City Attorney.
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Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
__________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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10. B
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
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A/P FAI
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Appoint an Advisory Committee to review two renaming
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
requests for Jaycee Park.
ER:
The City has received two requests for consideration of renaming
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
Jaycee Park. Ordinance 06-078 provides a policy for a systematic and consistent approach for
the official naming of streets, parks and buildings, etc. The policy is to name facilities through
an adopted process utilizing established criteria emphasizing “community values and
character, local history, geography, environmental, civics, monetary support and service to the
Boynton Beach community.”
The request for naming of a facility shall be initiated by the City Manager or a City
Commissioner. Then City staff reviews the request to see if it meets stated criteria as outlined
in Ordinance 06-078. Staff has conducted the review and agrees that both requests adhere to
the criteria. See attached memo.
Therefore, the next step requires the City Commission to appoint an advisory/review
committee to review the proposed requests. The Committee shall then forward their
recommendation to the Commission for a final decision.
In 2007 the City Commission utilized this process for the renaming of Southeast Neighborhood
Park in honor of Betty Thomas. The Commission appointed an advisory committee consisting
of a variety of members from several existing advisory boards, i.e. one to two members from
each of the following Boards: Education and Youth Advisory Board, Recreation and Parks
Advisory Board; Senior Advisory Board and the Community Relations Board.
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Attached is a roster of each of the above mentioned Boards. Staff recommends the
Commission follow the same past practice. It worked well. In addition to the advisory board
member appointments staff recommends the Commission appoint the Parks Superintendent,
Jody Rivers to the committee due to the requestor’s offer to plant and conduct maintenance at
the park and the City’s Library Archivist, Janet DeVries, due to consideration of historical
factors of the existing park name.
H?
None.
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
None at this time. Should a decision be made to change the park name, then
ISCAL MPACT
there will be a fiscal impact of changing signs, printed materials, etc. Staff will develop a cost
estimate as part of the review process.
A:
Not appoint advisory committee; not consider renaming of Jaycee Park.
LTERNATIVES
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10. C
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-138 - Approve an
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
agreement with Net Assets, a sole source provider, for the implementation, maintenance, customer
service support and hosting of the Conduits reporting service
ER:
The City Clerk’s Office recommends entering into this agreement with Net
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
Assets, the creator and manufacturer of the Conduits System, to provide Municipal Lien Searches for
title companies and attorney’s offices involved in property sales. This System is a software application
operated and maintained by Net Assets which will receive daily uploads of account information from our
electronic information systems. The information will be compiled by folio number and address and will
be retrieved by inputting the property address or folio number.
This System will automate the search of all of the City’s systems and will expedite lien requests and
save staff time. As a result, the time to process lien search requests will be dramatically reduced. We
currently charge a nominal fee of $15 for a three to five-day turnaround or $75 for 24-hour turnaround
of a request. This System will allow the customer access to this information within minutes. Currently,
there are numerous departments involved in these lien searches as follows:
City Clerk’s Office for lot mowing assessments;
Code Compliance for Code Enforcement Board liens and violations;
Utilities for outstanding water bills;
Building Department for open and expired building permits; and
Finance for outstanding roll-off and false alarm charges.
Using this System will consolidate the services provided by the departments to process these requests.
Each department will experience a reduction in the amount of staff time spent performing this task.
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Revenue realized by the City for the Municipal Lien Search service over the last three years has been
$19,265 in 2008, $33,125 in 2009 and $49,105 in 2010. These figures do not reflect the costs
associated with processing the requests. In this depressed market, the City Clerk’s Office performs
approximately 125-150 lien searches monthly and approximately 25 monthly searches of properties
residing outside the City limits, but within our water service area. During the housing boom in Fiscal
Years 2002/03 and 2003/04, the City Clerk’s Office was handling approximately 215 searches per
month.
Only two other municipalities in the State of Florida are using this System. The City of Hallandale
Beach uses this service and charges $125 per search and they are generating revenue of between
$10,000 and $15,000 per month. The City of Miami Beach also uses Net Assets for their lien searches
and charges $50 per search and $75 for a certified lien search.
Staff is recommending that the City Commission approve the fee of $115 for a complete lien search.
The cost of partial searches for building permits or water service only is recommended at $50.
Searches performed by City staff would be free of charge.
H?
Eliminating this time-consuming service from the
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
City Clerk’s Office would free up approximately 30% of one Administrative Associate’s time. The duties
and responsibilities of each member of the City Clerk’s staff are currently under review. There is more
than sufficient work available within the department to utilize the time and talents of that staff member.
Reassignments will be made to allow greater focus on compliance with Florida Statute regarding
Records Management.
Additionally, use of this System will enhance external/internal communication, offer improved customer
service, increase business friendliness and improve this process through information technology.
FI:
As one of the first five municipalities in the State to agree to use this service, there are
ISCAL MPACT
no start-up fees involved. The City will be required to pay Net Assets $8 per lien search requested.
(That cost increases to $10 on April 1, 2011 when Net Assets increases the fee for all of their
customers.) There is a $15 monthly fee for use of credit card and a 7.5¢ per transaction PayPal fee.
These fees will be paid from the charge paid by the customer. If we perform 125 complete lien
searches monthly, and 25 partial lien searches, the revenue produced is conservatively estimated to be
$175,000 annually after fees.
Using this service not only provides a newly-increased revenue stream, it consolidates the services of
four departments, which was a directive of the City Manager at the start of the budget process.
A:
The alternative to using this service would be to continue to perform the lien searches
LTERNATIVES
as is currently being done.
City Manager Note: This revenue stream is NOT currently included in the General Fund base pending
City Commission policy direction on the contract proposal.
S:\CC\WP\EasyAgenda Items\Agenda Items\2010\Net Assets Agenda Item-2.doc
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RESOLUTION NO. R 10 -
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, AUTHORIZING THE CITY
MANAGER TO EXECUTE A CONDUITS SERVICE AGREEMENT
BETWEEN THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH AND NETASSETS
CORPORATION FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION, MAINTENANCE
AND CUSTOMER SUPPORT AND HOSTING OF THE CONDUITS
REPORTING SERVICE; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS,
The City Clerk’s office recommends entering into this Agreement with Net Assets,
the creator and manufacturer of the Conduits System to provide municipal lien searches for title
companies and attorney’s offices involved in property sales; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida , upon the
recommendation of staff, deems it to be in the best interests of the City residents to enter into a Conduit
Service Agreement with NetAssets Corporation.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1.
The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2.
The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby
authorize and direct the City Manager to execute a Conduit Service Agreement between the City of
Boynton Beach and Net Assets Corporation for the implementation, maintenance, customer service
support and hosting of the Conduits reporting service, a copy of said Agreement is attached hereto as
Exhibit “A.”
Section 3.
This Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
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Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
ATTEST: Commissioner – Steven Holzman
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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Thursday, July 05, 2012
Carlos Aiken
City of Boynton Beach
100 East Boynton Beach Blvd
Boynton Beach, FL 33435
Carlos,
The letter is in regards to your inquiry about Net Assets Corporation being a sole source provider of the Conduits
service for the City of Boynton Beach.
Net Assets currently provides two services; Conduits™ and Constructer™. Both services are trademarks of Net
Assets Corporation and are only provided and serviced by Net Assets Corporation.
Sincerely,
David J. Gates
President, CEO
Net Assets Corporation
dgates@nassets.com
(541) 485-8876
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Conduits Service Agreement
EFFECTIVE DATE: ____________
PARTIES:
NETASSETS CORPORATION
("NETASSETS")
109 River Ave, Eugene, Oregon 97404
City of Boynton Beach
("ORGANIZATION")
100 East Boynton Beach Blvd
Boynton Beach, FL 33435
AGREEMENT
This Agreement is made as of the date stated above, (the “Effective Date”) and sets forth the terms and
conditions under which the online web application known as Conduits™ will be used by
ORGANIZATION, and made available for use by NETASSETS.
1. Definitions:
1.1 “Conduits™” shall mean the software application used for publication of the
ORGANIZATION’S interests in property via the World Wide Web as created by NETASSETS,
including web pages, graphics, data formats, and server components.
1.2 “Intellectual Property Rights” shall mean any and all now known or hereafter known tangible
and intangible, and in any media, means and forms of exploitation throughout the universe exploiting
current or future technology yet to be developed, (a) rights associated with works of authorship
throughout the universe, including but not limited to copyrights, moral rights, and mask-works, (b)
trademark and trade name rights and similar rights, (c) trade secret rights, (d) patents, designs,
algorithms and other industrial property rights, (e) all other intellectual and industrial property rights (of
every kind and nature throughout the universe and however designated) (including logos, “rental” rights
and rights to remuneration), whether arising by operation of law, contract, license, or otherwise, and (f)
all registrations, initial applications, renewals, extensions, continuations, divisions or reissues hereof
now or hereafter in force (including any rights in any of the foregoing).
1.3 “Search Transaction(s)” shall mean any search request initiated by an End-user for data related to
interest against an individual property.
1.4 “End-user(s)” shall mean any individual or entity that is given access to Conduits by
ORGANIZATION, excluding ORGANIZATION.
2. Payment
2.1 Search Fees. ORGANIZATION agrees to pay NETASSETS a fee for each Search Transaction
by an End-user. The Search Fee will be $10 per Search Transaction by an End-User.
2.2 Payment Method. NETASSETS will invoice ORGANIZATION monthly at its address noted on
page 1 of this Agreement or at such other address as ORGANIZATION may designate through
the information entered into Conduits. Payment will be due within fifteen (15) days of the
invoice date. Payments shall be made at NETASSETS’ address noted on page 1 of this
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Agreement or at such other address as NETASSETS may designate by written notice to
ORGANIZATION.
2.3 Startup Fee. ORGANIZATION agrees to pay NETASSETS an initial startup fee of $500.
Payment shall be made upon ORGANIZATION 's execution of this agreement.
3. Use of Conduits
3.1 Prohibited Actions. ORGANIZATION shall not adopt, translate, copy or modify Conduits, or
disassemble, decompile, reverse engineer, reverse compile, cross compile or otherwise attempt to derive
source code from Conduits. ORGANIZATION shall not create accounts for internal use of
Conduits for any person or entity outside of ORGANIZATION.
3.2 Transmission of Data. ORGANIZATION shall be solely responsible for the timely and accurate
update and transmission of information or other data entered for access via the Conduits application
system, and shall promptly report any problems encountered by ORGANIZATION or End-users in
operation of or access to the Conduits application. ORGANIZATION shall transmit all data to
NETASSETS in the format(s) as mutually agreed upon in writing during the term of this agreement.
3.3 Ownership Rights. Ownership of all Intellectual Property Rights in Conduits will at all times
remain the property of NETASSETS. ORGANIZATION agrees not to remove or obliterate any
copyright, trademark or proprietary rights notices of NETASSETS or NETASSETS's suppliers from
Conduits.
4. Term of Agreement/Termination
4.1 Term. This agreement is effective from the Effective Date, until the date of termination under
this Section 4.
4.2 Termination by ORGANIZATION. ORGANIZATION may terminate this Agreement:
4.2.1 At any time, with or without cause, effective upon sixty (60) days prior written notice to
NETASSETS, or
4.2.2 Thirty (30) days after delivery of written notice to NETASSETS by ORGANIZATION
that NETASSETS has breached any provision of this Agreement, if NETASSETS has not
cured such breach within the thirty (30) day period.
4.3 Termination by NETASSETS. NETASSETS may terminate this Agreement:
4.3.1 At any time, with or without cause, effective upon sixty (60) days prior written notice to
ORGANIZATION; or
4.3.2 Immediately upon written notice to ORGANIZATION in the event of any breach of
Sections 2, 3.1 or 3.3; or
4.3.3 Thirty (30) days after delivery of written notice to ORGANIZATION that
ORGANIZATION has breached any provision of this Agreement other than Sections 2,
3.1 or 3.3, and has not cured such breach within the thirty (30) day period.
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4.4 Actions Upon Termination.
4.4.1 ORGANIZATION 'S Actions. Upon termination ORGANIZATION shall immediately
discontinue use of Conduits.
4.4.2. NETASSETS' Actions. Upon termination NETASSETS shall cease to make available on
Conduits, via the World Wide Web or otherwise, any data related to
ORGANIZATION’s use of Conduits. NETASSETS shall have no obligation to return or
retransmit any data to ORGANIZATION, and after termination may archive data solely
for NETASSETS' business purposes.
5. Limitation of Liability and Indemnification
5.1 Maximum Monetary Liability for Breach of Agreement. Notwithstanding anything herein to the
contrary, the maximum aggregate amount of money damages for which NETASSETS may be liable to
ORGANIZATION under this Agreement, resulting from any cause whatsoever, shall be limited to the
amounts actually paid by ORGANIZATION to NETASSETS under this Agreement during the ninety
(90) days immediately preceding the date NETASSETS is notified in writing of a claim by
ORGANIZATION for breach of agreement.
5.2 Third Party Providers. ORGANIZATION acknowledges that in connection with Conduits,
information will be transmitted over local exchange, interexchange and internet backbone carrier
lines and through routers, switches and other devices owned, maintained and serviced by third
party local exchange and long distance carriers, utilities, internet service providers and others, all
of which are beyond the control of NETASSETS. Accordingly, NETASSETS assumes no
liability for or relating to the delay, failure, interruption or corruption of any data or other
information transmitted in connection with use of Conduits.
5.3 Indemnification with Respect to End-users. NETASSETS has no contractual relationship or
other legal duty to End-user(s) and it assumes no liability with respect to the use of Conduits
by End-user(s). Accordingly, to the extent permitted by law, including, but not limited to section
768.28 of Florida statutes, ORGANIZATION agrees to defend, indemnify, and hold
NETASSETS harmless for any losses, costs, claims, or other liabilities arising out of the misuse
of Conduits by End-users.
6. Support and Maintenance
6.1 General Support. NETASSETS shall provide to ORGANIZATION the maintenance and support
services as set forth in Appendix A: Service Level.
6.2 End-User Support. NETASSETS agrees to provide all initial support to End-Users of Conduits.
Any support issues relating to ORGANIZATION policy or data that cannot be dealt with by
NETASSETS will be forwarded to ORGANIZATION to provide support.
7. Miscellaneous Provisions
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7.1 No Assignment. Neither this Agreement nor any rights hereunder, in whole or in part, shall be
assignable or otherwise transferable by either party and any purported assignment or transfer shall be
null and void.
7.2 Severability. If any term or provision of this Agreement shall be found to be illegal or
unenforceable, then, notwithstanding, it will be enforced to the maximum extent permissible, and the
legality and enforceability of the other provisions of this Agreement will not be affected. It is expressly
understood and agreed that each and every provision of this Agreement which provides for a limitation
of liability is intended by the parties to be severable and independent of any other provision and to be
enforced as such.
7.3 Entire Agreement/Modification. This Agreement and its attachments constitute the entire
agreement between the parties concerning Conduits and supersede all prior agreements, whether
written or verbal, between the parties. No purchase order, other ordering document or any other
document which purports to modify or supplement this Agreement or any attachment hereto shall add to
or vary the terms and conditions of this Agreement, unless executed by both NETASSETS and
ORGANIZATION and expressly identified therein as a modification to this Agreement. No amendment
shall be considered to have been made to this Agreement unless it is in writing and is executed by both
parties.
7.4 Force Majeure. Neither party shall be liable or deemed to be in default for any delay or failure in
performance under this Agreement or interruption of service resulting directly or indirectly from acts of
God, or any causes beyond the reasonable control of such party, including without limitation
interruption of power or communications facilities or failure of data storage hardware or software that is
not caused solely by the party’s acts or omission.
7.5 Governing Law, Venue, Jurisdiction. The parties agree that this Agreement shall be governed
and construed by the laws of the State of Florida. The parties hereby submit to the jurisdiction and
venue of the Circuit Court of the State of Florida for Palm Beach County or, if appropriate, the federal
courts of the District of Florida.
7.6 Attorney Fees. In the event action is instituted to enforce any term of this Agreement, the
prevailing party shall recover from the losing party reasonable attorney fees incurred in such action as
set by the trial court and, in the event of appeal, as set by the appellate courts.
7.7 Notices. Any notice or other communication required or permitted to be given under this
Agreement will be in writing, will be delivered personally or by mail or express delivery, postage
prepaid, and will be deemed given upon actual delivery or, if mailed by registered or certified mail, on
the third business day following deposit in the mails, addressed to the appropriate party at the address
first set forth above. Either party may, by written notice, designate a different address for purposes of
this Agreement.
Net Assets Corporation:
By: ___________________________
David J. Gates, President
City of Boynton Beach
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By: __________________________________
Printed Name: _________________________
Title: ________________________________
Appendix A: Service Level
1. Conduits will be available 99.9% of the time during ORGANIZATION’s normal business
hours. Any individual outage in excess of 20 minutes or 4 outages exceeding 5 minutes each
will constitute a violation.
2. 80% of Conduits transactions will exhibit 10 seconds or less response time, defined as the
interval from the time the server receives a transaction request to the time a response is generated
and sent back. Missing the metric for business transactions measured over any business week
will constitute a violation.
3. Net Assets will respond to service incidents that affect multiple users within 24 hours, resolve
the problem within 48 hours, and update status every 12 hours. Missing any of these metrics on
an incident will constitute a violation.
4. Net Assets will respond to service incidents that affect individual users within 24 hours, resolve
the problem within 72 hours, and update status every 12 hours. Missing any of these metrics on
an incident will constitute a violation.
5. Net Assets will respond to non-critical inquiries within 48 hours and deliver an answer within 72
hours. Missing any of these metrics on an incident will constitute a violation.
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Thursday, July 05, 2012
Janet Prainito
City of Boynton Beach
100 East Boynton Beach Blvd
Boynton Beach, FL 33435
Janet,
This letter is in regards to the forthcoming adoption of the Conduits service for the City of Boynton Beach.
As one of the first 5 municipalities adopting the service in the State of Florida, the $500 Startup fee as identified in
the Service Agreement is waived.
Also, you are eligible to utilize the original rate for the Conduits service of $8 per report until April of 2011, at
which time the rate will become the standard $10 per report.
Sincerely,
David J. Gates
President, CEO
Net Assets Corporation
dgates@nassets.com
(541) 485-8876
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10. D
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Accept the following report on the Neighborhood
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Stabilization Program (NSP).
ER:
The status of the NSP Program is as follows:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
The total value of contract offers accepted on 17 properties is $1,645,200. This includes 8
properties in District II and 9 properties in District IV, representing approximately 72% of the
$2.2 million NSP funds available, excluding administration expenses and funds provided to the
Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA). The remaining 28% of funds will be used for
closing costs and the rehabilitation of acquired properties. The allocation of these funds is as
follows:
Acquisition & rehabilitation of 17 properties..........................................$2,267,000
CRA development of Ocean Breeze infrastructure....................................400,000
Administration............................................................................................296,311
PROGRAM TOTAL $2,963,311
H?
The purchase and rehabilitation of these
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
properties will be providing affordable housing for income eligible families.
FI:
The City of Boynton Beach has fully obligated its $2,963,311 of Neighborhood
ISCAL MPACT
Stabilization Program funding.
A:
Not to accept the report.
LTERNATIVES
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10. E
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Accept the Budget Status Report of the General Fund and
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
the Utility Fund for the eight (11) month period ended August 31, 2010.
ER:
This is the monthly financial report for the period thru August 31,
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
2010, As in prior monthly reports, we are summarizing and providing this analysis of actual
eleven (11)
revenues and expenditures of the City’s General Fund and Utility Fund for the
month period ended August 31, 2010; 92% of the fiscal year
. The analysis -
Compares actual results for the current period to (a) the annual budget for this fiscal
year and (b) the actual results for the same period compared to the annual budget of
the prior fiscal year and
Estimates and makes a conservative projection of revenues for the balance of this fiscal
year.
H?
The report is one of the financial reporting
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
services of the Finance Department for the purpose of providing interim financial information to
the City Commission and to City Management.
FI:
The fiscal impact of the actual budgetary results to date for the General Fund
ISCAL MPACT
and the Utility Fund follow.
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GENERAL FUND
The FY 2010 revised annual budget of $70.5 million represents a 4% decrease from the FY
2009 budget of $73.9 million that was modified to include an equal amount of Fire Assessment
Fund revenues and expenditures. In order to balance the FY 2010 budget, two non-revenue
funding sources were required.
A fund balance appropriation (reduction) of $3.5 million and
Transfers from other funds of $22.4 million ($9.4 M not available in FY 2010-11)
The fund balance reduction and transfers from other funds represent an unusually high 36% of
our total General Fund budget.
For the eleven months (92%) of FY 2010,
Revenues and transfers realized are $67.3 million (95%) of the budget estimate.
Expenditures incurred are $65.7 million (93%) of the annual appropriated budget.
FY 2010FY 2009
BudgetActual to DateActual to Date
Annual
Budget (*)
Amount%Amount%
Approved
Revenues/Transfers$ 70,517$ 67,31095%$ 73,963$ 63,71886%
Expenditures$ (70,517)$ (65,709)93%$ (73,963) $ (61,620)83%
Excess (Deficit)$ -$ 1,601$ - $ 2,098
(*)The FY 2009 budget represents the final amended budget for the year. The original budget
for the year was $70.7 million as noted on Exhibits A and B. The difference represented the
transfer of funding sources and an equal amount of expenditures from the Fire Assessment
Fund.
Revenues & Transfers (Exhibit A) -
Overall, we have received $67.3 million to date and
ahead at this point in time during the fiscal year in comparison to last year.
In the current year, these funding sources can be summarized into three major groups making
up the total percentage of the revenue budget:
1. 36% - $ 25.8 M – Property taxes less Tax Increment Financing to the CRA
The majority of property taxes are received in December (versus
ratably over the year) and the CRA is sent 100% of their taxes in
December. We monitor receipts in % comparison to last year.
2. 36% - $ 25.9 M – Transfers from other funds and Fund balance appropriated
Current practice is to make 1/12 of these funding sources available
to the General Fund monthly. We initiated this midway last year.
3. 28% - $ 18.8 M – Other revenues
100% - $ 70.5 M – Total funding sources
Expenditures (Exhibit B) –
General Fund expenditures to date are $65.7 million (93%) of the
$70.5 million expenditure appropriation for FY 2010. The current appropriation represents a
decrease of $272 thousand compared to FY 2009.
However, it should be recognized that the City’s Annual Required Contribution to the City’s
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three pension funds totaling $9.8 million has been accrued as expenditures in FY 2010 and is
reflected in the $65.7 million expenditures to date. However, in FY 2oo9 and in prior years, it
was not accrued and therefore not expended until paid.
The graph at the bottom of Exhibit B displays actual expenditures of $65.7 million are on track
with the budget yet below the $70.6 million actual spending levels in FY 2009 for this same
period ($61.6 + $9.0 million accrued Pension expense).
UTILITY FUND
The FY 2010 annual expenditure budget of $32.4 million represents nearly an 8% decrease
from the FY 2009 budget of $35.4 million. At the same time, necessary rate increases result in
an estimated $2.4 million fund balance increase to offset the FY 2009 deficit of $4.8 million.
In FY 2009, with declining water consumption, revenues were insufficient to cover the
expenditure budget resulting in a necessary appropriation of fund balance of $4.8 million last
year to cover the budgeted expenditures. Considering the need to balance the budget and
make up for the budgeted deficit, the following occurred last year.
Necessary rate increases were approved and put in place on May 1 resulting in added
revenues of $2.5 million to partially offset the $4.8 million estimated deficit.
Added expenditure reductions were implemented resulting in actual expenditures of
$30.0 million vs. the $35.4 million originally appropriated; resulting in a $5.4 million
savings of 15%.
326 of 408
For the eleven months (92%) of FY 2010,
Revenues realized are $30.9 million (95%) of the annual budget estimate.
Expenditures incurred are $28.7 million (89%) of the annual appropriated budget.
This results in an excess of revenues over expenditures of $2,472 thousand.
FY 2010FY 2009FY 2010 vs. 2009
Annual Annual
Actual to DateActual to Date
BudgetActual
BudgetBudget
Amount%Amount%%%
Revenues$ 32,465 $ 30,965 95%$ 35,442 $ 34,546 97%-8%-10%
Expenditures$ (32,465)$ (28,738)89%$ (35,442)$ (27,171)77%-8%6%
Excess (Deficit)$ -$ 2,227 $ -$ 7,375
The following provides brief comments on revenues and expenditures to date.
Revenues (Exhibit C) -
The $30.9 million in FY 2010 revenues and fund balance
appropriation when compared to same period for FY 2009 results in excess revenues of $2.2
million, note:
Water Sales - $15.5 million = 100% of the annual estimate, compared to $12.3 million at
this point in FY 2009. This $3.2 million difference results from water rate increases are
fully in place this year whereas they were not implemented in FY 2009 until May 1,
2009.
At this point in time last year in FY 2009, $4.4 million of fund balance appropriation was
recognized as a funding source. However, this year in FY 2010, we are recognizing a
return to fund balance of $2.2 million.
The May 1, 2009 water and sewer rate increases should provide for adequate bond debt
service coverage that was in jeopardy prior to the increases.
Expenditures (Exhibit D)
– Utility Fund expenditures to date are $28.7 million or 89% of the
annual appropriation compared to the $27.2 million or 77% of the FY 2009 elapsed budget
period. Individual percentage variances are noted on Exhibit D noting that all departmental
accounts are operating within their budget at this point in the year.
However, similar to the General Fund, it should be recognized that the City’s Annual Required
Contribution to the City’s pension funds totaling $1.4 million for the Utility Fund is not paid until
the end of the fiscal year; however, it has been accrued as expenditures and reflected in the
$28.7 million expenditures to date.
A:
Request further clarification at the City Commission meeting.
LTERNATIVES
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10. F
CITY MANAGER’S REPORT
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Review of capital project delivery methods. No
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Commission action required.
ER:
The City Commission recently requested that City Staff explore
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
and comment on the various construction delivery methods for City capital projects. Entire
college courses and textbooks are dedicated to this topic. Therefore, this matter will not be
discussed in exhaustive depth. Rather, this brief overview is intended to provide the City
Commission with a broad based understanding of these methods along with a few significant
pros and cons of each.
Design-Bid-Build
The Design-Bid-Build (DBB) procedure has served for many years as the traditional
project delivery method for both the public and private sectors. The process is exactly
as the name implies. First, the owner contracts for the project design. That design is
then bid competitively. Finally, a constructed contract is awarded.
This procedure has served government well, particularly when a project scope is very
clearly defined. With clear project definition, a capable architect/engineer can then
complete the project design according to the owner’s needs and budget and in
congruence with applicable standards and codes. It is critical that the design be one of
excellence to minimize unknown costs. Therefore, selection of the architect/engineer is
of paramount importance. In Florida, we are guided by the Consultant Competitive
Negotiation Act (CCNA). CCNA allows government to select design professionals
based upon their skills and experience relative to the demands of a particular project. It
today’s economic climate, Owners will seek design professionals with significant
332 of 408
experience and knowledge of construction processes that can instill construction
efficiencies and value engineering into the project design.
Projects are designed based upon two primary concepts, unit prices or lump sum. Unit
price projects comprise precise quantities of work are identified by the
architect/engineer and the contractor is then asked to provide prices for each unit of
work performed. For example, unit price contracts are typically utilized on civil
engineering infrastructure projects where given quantities of water main, pavement,
curbing, etc are measured and known. Bids for unit price contracts provide well defined
bid prices for each unit. Therefore, as quantities of work change through normal course
of the work, it is very easy to calculate the modified payment due to the contractor for
that work.
On the other hand, lump sum contracts are just that, lump sum. The contractor is asked
to provide a lump sum price to perform the work specified according to the bid plans
and specifications. Lump sum bids are typically associated with architectural building
projects where it would be impractical to quantify every unit of work required. For
example, it would be exceedingly difficult to quantify every unit of wire required to
construct a building and then measure that quantity for contractor payment. Therefore,
lump sum contracts require each bidder to determine the amount of materials and
labor/equipment hours necessary to construct the project according to plans and
specifications. In essence, each contractor performs a “material take off” and then
works out their own construction schedule. Again, it is important to note that excellent
contractor pricing requires excellent design preparation. Furthermore, if plans are
thorough and precise, there will be little discussion about changed conditions during
construction that may lead to increased costs. Sometimes it may be appropriate to pre-
qualify construction companies when the work is so unique that the owner’s wishes to
ensure that only those most qualified are allowed to bid. However, pre-qualification
must be used judiciously because when asking for the only the best contractors a higher
proportionate bid price should be expected.
Pros
DBB provides clearest pricing to the public.
DBB is pricing is truly competitive.
Well suited for stable or declining economic climates where bid pricing is
favorable and competitive.
Final project pricing is relatively certain within contingencies.
DBB does not allow for allegations of favoritism. Price rules.
Project timelines are clear. Completion dates well known.
Damage clauses for failure to perform are clearly specified.
Cons
Significant time is expended to select architect/engineers.
Time must also be allocated to bidding.
Owner, to some degree, assumes responsibility for cost increases, although
some errors and omissions may be the responsibility of the design
professional.
More Owner risk is found on lump sum contracts than on unit price contracts.
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Negotiated General Contract
Negotiated contracts are those where a contractor and owner negotiate project costs,
schedules, materials, subcontractor selections, etc. With negotiated contracts it is
virtually impossible to provide the critical guarantees to the public that the work is being
performed at the best possible price. For this reason, negotiated contracts of any sort
are not used by government except in the rarest of emergency situations where the
timing and importance of a project is so paramount that competitive pricing is no longer
the driving factor. This can be very difficult to explain to the public. Staff does not
recommend this process except in the most extreme of circumstances.
Design-Build
Simply stated, Design-Build (DB) is the melding of the design and construction
processes into one contract between the Owner and contractor whose primary benefit is
speed. However project speed is only achieved if the Owner is well prepared in
advance. The Owner may contract with an architect or with a builder who then serves
as lead. Or the architect and contractor may function as a joint venture wherein they
combine their company(s) forces and then act as one entity. Public agencies must take
great care when using DB to ensure competitive pricing and to avoid charges of
favoritism with contractors.
In order to obtain very favorable and competitive pricing, it is critical that the Owner
clearly define in advance the project needs. Project scope, space needs, LEED
classification, building function, aesthetics, material preferences and schedule, DBE
requirements, site information, equipment, furnishings, life cycle expectations, to name
a few, must be well thought out in advance so that clear and consistent direction can be
given to bidders/respondents. Often times, Owners are not capable of providing this
specific information and will contract with an architect to assist with program
development. Hence, some time savings is immediately lost and added costs are
created.
Participation in the selection process can be quite costly for contractors and
architect/engineers. These respondents will be asked to provide proposed designs,
project cost estimates and schedules. Therefore, it is highly desirable to conduct a pre-
qualification procedure to winnow out the candidates to a reasonable number of highly
qualified companies. Once again, this will add time to the process which, in a way,
further erodes the primary benefit of using DB which is speed.
There are a number of various of DB methods based upon an Owners needs including
Turnkey projects where design, construction and financing of the project are all
completed by the contractor until project delivery to the Owner; Lease and Lease to
Own which are self explanatory; and Bridging where an Owner contracts for significant
up-front design prior to award of a DB contract.
Pros
DB provides for more rapid project completion.
One entity is responsible for design and construction.
Value engineering is enhanced.
Schedules are more precise.
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Can use guaranteed maximum price (usually higher though).
Fewer design changes.
Cons
Project scope must be clear to keep costs at a minimum.
Since the designer and architect act as one entity, there are no longer
independent checks and balances.
Insurance and Risk must be clearly specified.
Misunderstanding with the Owner more likely given lack of early project
specificity. An astute and informed Owner is critical.
More Owner risk is found on lump sum contracts than on unit price contracts.
The designer and builder may have more allegiance to each other than to the
Owner.
Construction Management
The Construction Management (CM) process is by far the most complex project delivery
method. The CM process has gained notoriety in recent years and far more construction
companies offer professional CM services to owners than in prior years. This sudden
increase in the number of CM firms, and the accelerated use of CM services by Owners
since 2000, is not necessarily based upon a creation of a great new construction
process. Rather, the rapid influx of CM firms is a direct result of one of the primary
benefits of CM techniques; Cost containment in a period of rapidly increasing inflation.
Many Owners, both public and private choose to utilize CM services as a hedge against
rapidly increasing costs of labor and materials. CM firms are outstanding resources in
this regard. Furthermore, CM can include variations of guaranteed maximum price
placing the construction manager “at risk” for this guarantee. The CM process is often
used by the those Owners who are not construction savvy and/or do not employ staff
with a keen understanding of construction components, contract law and general
building processes from design to permitting to project closeout.
The CM project delivery process is one where the Owner contracts with a construction
firm that will serve on behalf of the Owner as the manager of the construction schedule
and contractors. However, unlike traditional contract DBB project delivery, CM
contracting requires the Owner to enter into separate contracts with the
architect/engineer, construction manager, and all the various trade subcontractors.
Essentially, the agency or City becomes the general contractor and the construction
manager, hired by the agency, is the project manager for that agency.
In a CM process, the Owner must still contract with an architect/engineer. This is
beneficial to the City because the architect/engineer is independent to the construction
manager. However, to be effective, the construction manager is ideally placed under
contract by the Owner concurrent with the architect/engineer such that the construction
manager can be an integral part of project design early on thereby gaining additional
expertise that yields construction efficiencies and value engineering from the
perspective of the builder.
An effective construction manager will ensure that overall project costs are kept to
efficient minimums. However, those highly coveted construction cost savings do come
at a price. The construction manager must be compensated for these services. Early in
the project evolution, construction manager services during design can be negotiated on
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a lump sum basis. However, construction manager services later into the construction
phase are seldom lump sum because of project scope uncertainties and schedule.
Complex projects are inherently subject to changes and construction managers prefer
their fees to be based upon project scope and not lump sum. Therefore, it is common
to compensate construction manager on a percentage of project cost basis plus
reimbursables. It is common to pay construction managers anywhere from 8% to 12%
of the project construction costs as the fee for these services. Where a guaranteed
maximum price for construction is quoted and in at risk construction, the construction
manager fees are included in the GMP. It is always hoped, but not guaranteed, that the
services provided by the construction manager will yield reduced construction costs in
excess of the costs of construction management services.
Interestingly, the City Engineering staff has been practicing the CM process for the last
two years. Our own engineering project managers have contracted with various
subcontractor trades and scheduled all work for projects such as renovations at Fire
Stations 1 and 3 and also for construction of the Library Café. So, we are in essence
our own CM firm, albeit on a small scale.
Pros
Well suited for highly complex projects.
Ideal for projects where time is of utmost importance.
Ideal for projects that proceed in an inflationary period.
Value engineering is enhanced.
Ideal where Owner is not construction savvy.
Cons
Requires increasingly complex contractually agreements with the construction
manager.
May require increased Owner Purchasing staff participation in subcontracting.
Owners must carefully select construction managers based upon defined
criteria to avoid charges of political favoritism.
Entire process is cumbersome.
Adds cost of the construction manager to the overall project cost. This cost
must be offset in other project efficiencies.
Project Delivery in Boynton Beach
This discussion is intended only to briefly describe alternatives for project delivery.
Within each alternative there are many variations that can be applied to best address
specific project needs or to address uncertain economic variables. City staff is certainly
not as well versed in these delivery methods as may be other larger cities with larger
capital project loads nor do we claim to be as knowledgeable as some private firms who
provide these services. We do, however, believe we have sufficient understanding of
application of these methods to complete our planned capital schedule.
In this economic climate, Design-Bid-Build is proving to be delivery method of choice
and will likely remain so for a number of years. The DBB process is yielding
outstanding price points for the taxpayer. However, despite that, the Design Build or
Construction Manager methods (or variations thereof) may have their rightful place at
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the table for certain projects that are inherently complex or time sensitive (the Old High
School for example).
Basically, the delivery method is chosen based upon project needs. The delivery
method is not chosen and arbitrarily applied to a project simply for the sake of choosing
that method. In summary, city staff will recommend the most appropriate delivery
method based for each project based upon project complexity and combined with policy
directive from the City Commission for each specific future project.
H?
NA
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
NA
ISCAL MPACT
A:
NA
LTERNATIVES
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11. A
FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
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GENDA TEM
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Conduit Bond Issue - Charter School of Boynton Beach -
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
October 5, 2010
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
ISCAL MPACT
A:
LTERNATIVES
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11. B
FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
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GENDA TEM
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Noise Control Ordinance - First Reading - TABLED ON
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
July 20, 2010 and August 3, 2010 - (TBD)
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
ISCAL MPACT
A:
LTERNATIVES
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11. C
FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
September 21, 2010
COBB
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AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
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PENINGSUBLIC EARING
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THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
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GENDA TEM
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Live Entertainment Ordinance - First Reading - TABLED
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
ON July 20, 2010 and August 3, 2010 - (TBD)
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
ISCAL MPACT
A:
LTERNATIVES
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11. D
FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
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THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
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BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Police Complex -- Discussion of project timing, scope,
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
location and funding alternatives available (TBA)
ER:
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
H?
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
ISCAL MPACT
A:
LTERNATIVES
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12. A
NEW BUSINESS
September 21, 2010
COBB
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AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
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PENINGSUBLIC EARING
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A/P FAI
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Consideration of a salary reduction by City Commission for
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Fiscal Year 2010-11.
ER:
At the request of Commissioner Orlove, the City Commission is
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
being asked to consider taking a voluntary reduction in salary of 6% for Fiscal Year 2010-11.
The current salary and expense allowance for the City Commission is as follows:
Title Annual Salary Expense Allow Yr.
MAYOR $ 20,010.02 $ 7,571.48
COMMISSION $ 16,675.72 $ 7,002.04
COMMISSION $ 16,675.72 $ 7,002.04
COMMISSION $ 16,675.72 $ 7,002.04
COMMISSION $ 16,675.72 $ 7,002.04
A 6% reduction would change the salaries as follows:
Revised Salary Reduction
MAYOR $ 18,809.42 $ 1,200.60
COMMISSION $ 15,675.18 $ 1,000.54
COMMISSION $ 15,675.18 $ 1,000.54
COMMISSION $ 15,675.18 $ 1,000.54
COMMISSION $ 15,675.18 $ 1,000.54
Total
$ 81,510.13 $ 5,202.77
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H?
TBD Note that the City Commission has
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
voluntarily frozen their salary and expense allowance for FY 2010-11
FI:
Savings of $5,202
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Do not adjust salaries of Commission for FY 2010-11.
LTERNATIVES
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13. A
LEGAL
September 21, 2010
COBB
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AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
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A/P UB
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSNFINISHED USINESS
NO
ATURE F
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AI
GENDA TEM
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ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 FAI
IDS AND URCHASES OVER UTURE GENDA TEMS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Request for closed door session at 6:00 p.m. on October
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
5, 2010 regarding CLEAR CHANNEL OUTDOOR, INC., Petitioner vs. CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT, PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION, Respondent –
Case No. 502010CA013764XXXXMB
ER:
Pursuant to Florida Statutes 286.011(8), a request is being made
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
of the City Commission to meet in private at 6:00 p.m. on October 5, 2010 to discuss pending
litigation as noted above.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
The cost of a court reporter to transcribe the thirty minute session.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Decline the request to meet in a closed door session to discuss litigation.
LTERNATIVES
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CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
City Attorney’s Office
MEMORANDUM
TO: Honorable Mayor and City Commission
Kurt Bressner City Manager
FROM: James A. Cherof, City Attorney
DATE: September 15, 2010
RE: Request for Private Attorney-Client Session
________________________________________________________________________
Pursuant to Section 286.011(8), Florida Statutes, I am requesting a private attorney-client session
of the City Commission to be held at 6:00 p.m. on October 5, 2010, to discuss pending litigation in the
following case:
CLEAR CHANNEL OUTDOOR, INC., Petitioner vs. CITY OF BOYNTON
BEACH DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT, PLANNING AND ZONING
DIVISION, Respondent –
Case No. 502010CA013764XXXXMB
This request is precipitated by developments in the case on which we need additional
direction and input from the Commission. I will be in attendance along with the City Manager
Kurt Bressner. We will need approximately thirty (30) minutes hour.
JAC/lms
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13. B
LEGAL
September 21, 2010
COBB
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AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
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CCL
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ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-139 - Authorize a
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
second 60-day extension of the "Notice of Intent" (NOI) and moratorium to allow final processing of
ordinances following the study of impacts and regulations related to pain clinics, pain management
clinics and other uses that dispense prescription pain medications.
ER:
The City Commission approved Resolution No. R10-020 on
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
February 2, 2010 thereby issuing a Notice of Intent (NOI) to consider the need for, and adopt
pending development regulations under a 180-day moratorium period applicable to pain
clinics, pain management clinics and other uses that dispense prescription pain medications.
st
On June 1, after hearing the progress report from staff, the Commission directed staff to draft
code amendments necessary to regulate said businesses, following the actions taken by other
local governments. Staff continued to extract information from similar regulations previously
adopted, and from the ongoing effort by the Broward County Task Force. Code amendments
have been drafted and are being placed in ordinance format. The additional 60 days is
necessary to cover the time period existing between the planned review by the Planning &
ththnd
Development Board on October 26 and the planned adoption date of November 16 (2
Reading of the Ordinances). The Land Development Regulations Chapter 1, Article XI, Section
“F” allows for an extension of the NOI and moratorium if additional time is required for
deliberation and study. Lastly, for comparison purposes, the extension would result in a total
moratorium period of 10 months, which is 2 months less than the County’s comparable NOI
period of one (1) year (assuming the County does not extend its NOI, which would further
increase the margin between review periods). As staff has previously indicated, there currently
is no perfect ordinance to address this problem. The problems represented by the targeted
pain clinics are dynamic, as represented by the fact that Delray Beach, one of the first cities to
adopt pain clinic regulations, has amended their respective regulations twice since original
adoption in late 2009. The City will continue to monitor pain clinic operations, will stay involved
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or networked with county-wide efforts in Palm Beach and Broward Counties, and monitor
subsequent actions taken at the State level. Warranted amendments to these ordinances or
the remaining Code of Ordinances are anticipated and would be processed timely.
Staff recommends that the temporary moratorium be extended for 60 days, thereby extending
the NOI from September 29, 2010 to November 28, 2010. For additional background
information on this project, please see the accompanying update report prepared by staff for
st
the June 1 Commission meeting.
H?
If extended, no new applications for
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
businesses subject to this NOI shall be accepted or processed during this intended to be final
time period that the NOI remains in effect. This Notice of Intent shall only apply to any
application processed by the City that relates to a pain clinic, pain management clinic and any
use that dispenses prescription pain medications.
FI:
N/A.
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not approve the resolution and maintain regulations as status quo, or not
LTERNATIVES
approve the resolution allowing the NOI to expire prior to adoption of intended code
amendments.
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RESOLUTION NO. R10 -
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
AUTHORIZING A SECOND SIXTY DAY EXTENSION OF THE
“NOTICE OF INTENT” APPROVED BY RESOLUTION NO. 10-020;
.
AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE
WHEREAS,
the City Commission approved a Notice of Intent (NOI #2010-1) by Resolution R10-
020 on February 2, 2010; and
WHEREAS
, the Notice of Intent was to be in effect from the date of adoption and thereafter for a
maximum period of 180 days, unless otherwise extended by the City Commission by subsequent Resolution
following public hearing; and
WHEREAS,
on July 6, 2010 the City Commission authorized a sixty (60) day extension of the
Notice of Intent and moratorium; and
WHEREAS,
the additional sixty (60) days is necessary to cover the time period existing between
the planned review by the Planning and Development Board on October 26, 2010 and the planned adoption
date of November 16, 2010; and
WHEREAS,
staff has recommended the temporary moratorium be extended for and additional 60
days thereby extending the time period from September 29, 2010 to November 28, 2010.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby extend the
Notice of Intent #2010-1, originally approved by Resolution No. R10-020, for an additional sixty days, to
expire on November 28, 2010.
Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
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CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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COBB
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CMD:
June 1, 2010
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RACC:
Review update on Pain Management Clinic Regulations
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
being explored following issuance of the Notice of Intent and commencement of a temporary
moratorium, and accept staff recommendation to draft regulations for consideration based on findings to
date.
ER:
The City Commission approved Resolution No. R10-020 on
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
February 2, 2010 thereby issuing a Notice of Intent (NOI) to consider the need for, and adopt
pending development regulations under a 180-day moratorium period applicable to pain
clinics, pain management clinics and other uses that dispense prescription pain medications.
The evaluation or study would target the performance and operation of such uses, and their
impacts upon adjacent businesses and land uses. If additional time is needed to study the
subject uses and their impacts, and adopt any necessary amendments to the Land
Development Regulations, the Commission may extend the NOI. However, if the moratorium is
not extended, it would expire on August 1, 2010.
This NOI and moratorium is in response to findings, announcements, and other information
generated at national, state and county levels regarding the negative aspects of such uses
which ultimately lead to, or support additions to, or deaths from, prescription pain medications.
Such businesses are understood to have very limited treatment services and medical
oversight, but primarily distribute addictive pain medications without appropriate, professional
and ethical medical care. Specific documented findings include the U. S. Department of
Health and Human Services releasing of data showing that prescription drug deaths are now
the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. Further, the Florida Board of Medicine
(the Board), at their meeting in December, 2008, cited the “rapid proliferation of pain clinics
that may be contributing to increased abuse of controlled substances,” and concluded “there
may be a need to develop rules and regulations for these clinics to provide oversight related to
evaluation and follow up of these difficult patients and help physicians identify persons not
seeking care but just pill shopping for narcotics;” The Board further notes that “an average of 7
patients a day are reported as dying of prescription drug overdose in Florida, a number that far
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exceeds the number dying from illegal drug use;”. Such events and information may have lead
Florida’s Governor to sign a bill in July creating a statewide database that monitors prescription
drug purchases by patients, with the intent to curtail “drug shopping” by patients which involves
the patient visiting multiple pain clinics to obtain numerous prescriptions.
Palm Beach County has reported an influx of “pain clinics and “pain management clinics”, and
there is current legal action taken on one or more physicians suspected of the unethical and
illegal dispensing of prescription pain medications. The County and many municipalities in the
County as well as throughout the State have enacted similar moratoriums to begin addressing
this problem.
Subsequent to issuance of the NOI in February, Staff has 1) maintained contact with the
County and other cities to stay abreast of their related actions; 2) observed the progress of the
state legislature as they considered applicable state-wide regulations; 3) collected and
reviewed Police Department reports on local incidences involving pain clinics within the City;
and 4) collected and reviewed municipal regulations adopted within the area. This progress,
along with a description of subsequent tasks to be accomplished, is described below:
1) County and County-wide efforts
To date, Palm Beach County has not progressed toward completing a zoning study or drafting
applicable regulations. Since issuing Boynton’s NOI, The Town of Lantana and Pompano
Beach have adopted regulations to control pain clinics, both modeled after the ordinance
adopted in Delray Beach in late 2009. The Intergovernmental Plan Amendment Review
th
Committee (IPARC) will discuss this topic at its next regular meeting scheduled for May 27.
City staff will attend to continue looking for new findings, data, and proposed regulations from
other jurisdictions that can contribute to our effort.
2) 2010 State Legislative session
Staff understands that the final bill written to address pain clinics, if signed, will require such
uses to register with the Florida Department of Health (which will help facilitate the conducting
of background checks and annual inspections), and require the clinics to be owned by a
licensed physician or be licensed as a “health care clinic” (as defined by State Law). The bill
also prohibits the clinics from advertising the actual controlled substance. Further, when
insurance is not used to purchase specified controlled substances, the dose prescribed cannot
exceed a 72 hour supply (which totals 18 pills using a liberal prescription rate of 1 pill per 4
hours). Lastly, the bill would require that all physicians practicing in such clinics to essentially
have special training in the field of pain treatment.
3) Incidents and crime at local clinics
Police Department incident reports were collected for the past several years on known pain
clinics and management centers located within the City. Of the nine (9) known business five
(5) of them have had repeated calls involving suspicious activity or vehicles, or break in and
theft. Of those five (5) businesses, two of them have had five (5) calls each again involving a
combination of fraud, break-in/theft, or uncooperative patrons. The most critical aspect of this
dilemma involving pain clinics is emphasized by information collected during the police
investigation of a call to 1325 S. Congress Avenue (Southeast Pain and Rejuvenation) on
th
March 5. One of four (4) individuals traveling together from Kentucky described that certain
individuals will travel such distances to obtain nearly 300 pills of Roxycodone for resale back in
Kentucky. This is a significant amount of medication compared to the typical dose prescribed
by a doctor, and the prescription limit currently proposed by the State Legislature. This aspect
of the pain clinic research is the most significant, relating to crime, drug addiction, and fatality,
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and was the impetus behind the many moratoriums enacted by local and county governments
in Florida, as well as the cause of the recent attention given it by the State Legislature. As for
subsequent action by staff, staff will request Police incident reports on adjacent and other
medical businesses for comparison purposes, and is contemplating interviewing operators of
adjacent businesses to determine if such businesses are negatively impacted by a neighboring
pain clinic.
4) New zoning ordinances by other local municipalities
As indicated above, staff has obtained and reviewed regulations recently adopted by others to
regulate pain clinics. The two ordinances obtained for review are from Delray Beach and
Lantana. They are generally similar, with the exception that whereas the Delray Beach
ordinance centers on their new definition of a “Medical Office”, the heart of Lantana’s
ordinance is in their amended definition for a “Clinic”. The ordinance adopted by the City of
Pompano Beach has not been obtained for review, as it is understood to have been written
based on the content of Delray’s ordinance. Both ordinances reviewed by staff target the
action of direct dispensing of controlled substances, and specifically prohibit such service at
either “Medical Offices” or “Clinics” with exceptions that include (consolidated and
paraphrased):
A. When the amount of the dispensed substance is only for that particular treatment
session including care at an emergency room of a licensed hospital;
B. When the substance is administered for in-patient care at a hospital, nursing home, etc.;
C. When prescribed by a health care professional in connection with the treatment of a
person under the age of 16; and
D. When dispensing a one-time, 72-hour emergency resupply to a patient.
It is obvious that such regulations would significantly impact the ability of such businesses to
dispense large quantities of controlled pain medications, which otherwise attracts those
individuals motivated by addictions and criminal intent, and who are circumventing the laws
established by the Federal Government and health care industry. With respect to subsequent
tasks, staff will continue to review and consider any ordinances adopted by other cities or
counties as part of this project.
Given the lack of current advancement by the County toward adopting relevant regulations,
who had originally hoped for a consolidated effort with the County’s municipalities, Staff
ultimately recommends that the Commission direct staff to draft an ordinance similar to
Delray’s and Lantana’s, but tailored to match the City’s zoning structure. Notwithstanding the
impact of any applicable public notification requirements, a first draft of this ordinance could be
prepared for consideration by the Commission within 30 days. If generally approved by the
Commission, the final wording would be prepared and forwarded to the Planning and
Development Board before returning to the Commission for First Reading.
H?
N/A
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Direct staff to obtain and forward specific additional information not described
LTERNATIVES
herein prior to preparation of an ordinance.
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13. C
LEGAL
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RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-140 - Authorize a
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
second 60-day extension of the "Notice of Intent" (NOI) and moratorium to allow final processing of
ordinances following the study of impacts and regulations related to adult entertainment uses.
nd
ER:
On February 2, the Commission approved Resolution No. R10-
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
21, thereby issuing a NOI to commence a temporary (180-day) moratorium allowing staff to
conduct a warranted planning study on the operation and impacts of adult entertainment uses,
and consider revising applicable city codes and ordinances as necessary. The additional 60
days will cover the time period existing between the planned review by the Planning &
ththnd
Development Board on October 26 and the planned adoption date of November 16 (2
Reading of the Ordinances). This additional time period will also allow a preliminary review by
the Commission of a draft ordinance for feedback, particularly given the typically complex and
controversial nature of the uses being studied. This preliminary review would likely occur at
one of the two regular Commission meetings scheduled for October.
The Land Development Regulations Chapter 1, Article XI, Section “F” allows for an extension
of the NOI and moratorium if additional time is required for deliberation and study. Staff
recommends that the temporary moratorium be extended for 60 days, thereby extending the
NOI from September 29, 2010 to November 28, 2010.
The additional time is necessary for the completion of draft regulations and placement into
ordinance format, Board review, preliminary review by the Commission of the proposed
regulations, the incorporation of any warranted changes into the ordinances and final adoption
of the ordinances.
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H?
If extended, no new applications for
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
businesses subject to this NOI shall be accepted or processed during the period that this
Notice has been extended. This Notice of Intent shall only apply to any application processed
by the City that involves an Adult Entertainment Use. Adult Entertainment Uses are defined by
the Land Development Regulations, Part 3. Chapter 1. Article II. Definitions.
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
Not approve the resolution and maintain regulations as status quo, or not
LTERNATIVES
approve the resolution allowing the NOI to expire prior to adoption of intended code
amendments.
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RESOLUTION NO. R10 -
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
AUTHORIZING AN ADDITIONAL SIXTY DAY EXTENSION OF
THE “NOTICE OF INTENT” APPROVED BY RESOLUTION NO. 10-
.
021; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE
WHEREAS,
the City Commission approved a Notice of Intent (NOI #2010-2) by Resolution R10-
021 on February 2, 2010; and
WHEREAS
, the Notice of Intent was to be in effect from the date of adoption and thereafter for a
maximum period of 180 days, unless otherwise extended by the City Commission by subsequent Resolution
following public hearing; and;
WHEREAS,
on July 6, 2010, the City Commission approved a sixty (60) day extension of the
Notice of Intent and moratorium to September 29, 2010; and
WHEREAS,
staff has recommended the temporary moratorium be extended for an additional sixty
(60) days thereby extending the time period from September 29, 2010 to November 28, 2010 to allow
additional time for the completion of draft regulations and placement into ordinance format, Board review,
preliminary review by the Commission of the proposed regulations, and final adoption of the ordinances.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing "Whereas" clauses are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true
and correct and are hereby made a specific part of this Resolution upon adoption hereof.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby extend the
Notice of Intent #2010-2, originally approved by Resolution No. R10-021, for an additional sixty days, to
expire on November 28, 2010.
Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
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______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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14. A
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RACC:
PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 10-021 - SECOND
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
READING - Amending the City of Boynton Beach Code of Ordinances Article I, by creating Section 2-
25, to be entitled "Code of Ethics", incorporating by reference the Palm Beach County Code of Ethics
into the City's Code of Ordinances.
ER:
The City Commission authorized the City Attorney and the City Manager
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
to work with the new Ethics Commission of Palm Beach County to ascertain the procedure for an
earlier participation in the Ethics Commission in advance of the November 2010 referendum. The
City Attorney and City Manager met with County staff on Monday, August 23, 2010 to review the
program and operation of the Ethics Commission and the Inspector General.
The City Commission approved this Ordinance on First Reading on September 7, 2010.
The proposal from the County would be only for Ethics Commission participation. If the City
Commission authorizes the Interlocal agreement, we would not be subject to the Inspector
General’s oversight. The County has determined that municipal participation in that aspect of
the program must wait until it is determined that the referendum passes in November. Even
then, it is anticipated that the conversion process to place municipalities under the IG’s office
won’t occur until March 2011 at the earliest. The reason for this is that the fee structure for
municipal participation must be developed in cooperation with the League of Cities. This
means that if the City opts to join the Ethics Commission in September, there will be no cost to
the City for their services.
Q&A on the next page.
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1. How does the contract fee collection system work?
Comment: This item is on hold until after the referendum and will be negotiated
with the cities as a group via League of Cities. The contract fee program funds
the Inspector General Office not the Ethics Commission.
2. What type of contracts are covered for the fee collection and what are exempt?
Comment: See #1
3. What training resources are available for Boynton Beach?
Comment: The full-training resources of the Ethics Commission will be available
to the City at no cost.
4. How does the training and filing requirements for elected officials work?
Comment: The County filing process parallels the state system. Copies of the
elected official’s state report are filed with the County.
5. What reports are required of them? Frequency?
Comment: The current quarterly gift form that is filed with the state (if there is a
gift over $100) continues with a copy to the County.
6. How does the ordinance affect advisory board members? Is there a filing and training
requirement for them?
Comment: Yes. Advisory Board members, commission and staff will be required
to take the ethics training and certify same. There will also be an annual
reporting requirement for those advisory board members and staff that currently
do not have to file the state ethics form. This will probably be effective October
2011.
7. How does the ordinance affect staff? Is there a filing requirement for them?
Comment: See answer to #6
8. Who is required to take the training and certify completion?
Comment: All elected officials, all advisory board members and all staff. The
Ethics Commission will develop and deliver the training to all. There may be the
ability to do the training on-line.
9. How does the lobbyist registration process work?
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Comment: This is on hold until after the referendum. Most likely, there will be a
county wide registration system that could be an effective replacement to local
registration programs.
10. What filing or reports are required of a municipality to the County under the terms of the
ordinance? What is the frequency of any such report?
Comment: This will likely be developed after the referendum and will mainly be a
reporting mechanism for city issued contracts that would be subject to the fee
collection system for the IG Office.
11. What areas of the ordinance have caused difficulty in terms of administration of the
code and impact? Will there be changes?
Comment: The main areas of concern were addressing secondary employment
of staff, clarifying what constituted a conflict for an advisory board member and
business dealings they might have with the county and smoothing out the waiver
process if there was a conflict declared for a county advisory board member.
12. Is the CRA Automatically included?
Comment: No. Steps would need to be included in the mutual approval process
to include the CRA specifically. This is recommended by City staff.
In response to an earlier briefing to the City Commission, the following additional questions
were asked by a member of the City Commission:
1) What exactly will this Commission be reviewing?
As stated on the Ethics Commission web site:
The Ethics Commission receives and investigates complaints and is charged with
enforcement of the Palm Beach County Code of Ethics, Lobbyist registration and
Post Employment Ordinances. The commission also issues advisory opinions to
county officials, employees and others subject to its jurisdiction such as county
vendors, lobbyists and their employers.
The Ethics Commission will perform the same functions for municipalities that consent
by agreement to allow the Ethics Commission to perform those functions.
2) Who will be making decisions, since the inspector general is not going to part of the
equation?
Advisory opinion can be issued by the Executive Director to the Ethics Commission if
the facts involve issues substantially similar to previous advisory opinions. In other
cases, the Ethics Commission itself will review and issue the opinion.
3) What, if any, law will this commission be utilizing to make decisions?
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The Palm Beach County Code of Ethics, which is currently codified in Article XIII of
Chapter 2 of the Palm Beach County Code.
4) What, if any, difference will there be in the process between what exists now and this
commission?
The process for obtaining opinions and for the investigation and determination of
violation of ethical standards is currently performed by the Florida Commission
on Ethics. The Florida Commission has offices in Tallahassee.
The procedures for obtaining opinions and for investigation of allegations of
ethical breach are substantially the same under the State and County regulations.
Proximity and expedience may be the primary distinguishing factors.
The Palm Beach County Ethics Commission will also provide local training of City
officials, employees and advisory board members.
5) What if any previous decisions, edict, etc will this commission be using to make its decision,
if they will be making any?
Great weight will be given to the State CEO opinions when the language of the County
Ethics Code mirrors the State Ethics Code. Where there is similarity, the Ethics
Commission will also looked to the state CEO for guidance. No state opinion is binding
on the Ethics Commission, but apparently to date, the Ethics Commission has given
some weight to relevant state interpretations. In preparing advisory opinions the
Executive Director has advised that he will routinely check the state database of
opinions for their interpretation of the issues and include relevant interpretations in the
analysis. He will also examine attorney general opinions and appellate court decisions.
6) Finally, and most importantly, please describe exactly what this commission will be doing,
what they expect from the city, what process is in place? I want to know exactly what we are
potentially agreeing to?
Once an Agreement is entered into, City officials, employees and Advisory Board
Members will be required to comply with the County Ethics Code and will be subject to
the jurisdiction of the Ethics Commission.
The City will be required to cooperate with the ethics training required by the County.
With the exception of the loss of work time
By City employees for training, there is no charge for the training.
The City will also be obligated to cooperate in the investigatory stage. This will include
providing records and allowing access to the Ethics Commission investigatory
personnel.
The ILA grants the Ethics Commission these powers:
(A) The Commission on Ethics shall have the authority to: (1) review, interpret,
render advisory opinions and enforce the Code of Ethics, Post-employment
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and lobbyist registration ordinances; (2) investigate legally sufficient
complaints within the jurisdiction of the Commission on Ethics and
conduct public hearings as provided by the Commission on Ethics
ordinance; and (3) develop and deliver, or contract with other entities to
develop and deliver training programs and ensure that effective and
meaningful training experiences are delivered in a timely and efficient
manner.
(B) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to conduct investigations,
and receive full and unrestricted access to the records of the Public Entity,
all elected and appointed Public Entity officials and employees, Public
Entity departments, divisions, agencies and instrumentalities, contractors
and other persons and entities doing business with the Public Entity and/or
receiving Public Entity funds regarding any such contracts or transactions
with the Public Entity.
(C) In the case of a refusal to obey a request for documents or for an interview,
the Commission on Ethics shall have the power to subpoena witnesses,
administer oaths, and require the production of records in a manner
consistent with section 162.08 Florida Statutes. The Commission on
Ethics shall not interfere with any ongoing criminal investigation or
prosecution of the State Attorney or the U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Florida.
(D) Where the Commission on Ethics suspects a possible violation of any
state, federal or local law, or rule, regulation or policy, the Executive
Director or designee shall notify the appropriate civil, criminal or
administrative agencies. In the case of a possible violation of a rule,
regulation or policy governing a Public Entity employee, the Executive
Director or designee shall also notify the governing body of the Public
Entity and the head of the Department for which the employee works.
(E) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to require officials and
employees to participate in ethics training on a regular basis.
(F) The Commission on Ethics’ “hotline” will receive complaints related to
Public Entity operations. The Public Entity will support and assist the
Commission on Ethics in publicizing the “hotline” and encouraging the
reporting of ethics violations by local citizens, officials and employees.
(G) The Commission on Ethics may exercise any of the powers contained in
the Commission on Ethics Ordinance upon its own initiative.
(H) With the exception of the initial complaint filed in a matter, all records held
by the Commission on Ethics and its staff related to an active preliminary
investigation are confidential and exempt from disclosure in a manner
consistent with the provisions in s. 112.3188(2) Florida Statutes.
(I) The Commission on Ethics and its staff shall be considered “an
appropriate local official” of the Public Entity for purposes of whistleblower
protection provided by s. 112.3188(1), Florida Statutes.
(J) The Commission on Ethics may recommend remedial actions and may
provide prevention and training services to Public Entity officials,
employees, and any other persons covered by this Agreement. The
Commission on Ethics may follow up to determine whether recommended
remedial actions have been taken.
(K) The Commission on Ethics shall monitor the costs of investigations
undertaken. The Commission on Ethics shall cooperate with other
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governmental agencies to recover restitution from other entities involved in
willful misconduct in regard to Public Entity funds.
(L) In any case in which the Commission on Ethics determines that the
complaining party filed a frivolous or groundless complaint as defined in s.
57.105 Florida Statutes, or a complaint with malicious intent and with the
knowledge that the complaint contains material false allegations, the
commission shall order the complaining party to pay any costs and
attorneys fees incurred by the commission and/or the alleged violator.
(M) The Commission on Ethics will maintain a website and all required
databases including gift reports, lobbyist expenses (after 2011),
enforcement decisions and advisory opinions.
(N) The Commission on Ethics shall annually prepare and publish a written
report concerning the work and activities of the Office of Commission on
Ethics.
7) Please list the other cities that are speaking with them, and all other cities that have decided
to take a pass.
Lantana is proceeding on adopting the necessary Interlocal agreements and is
expected to join the Ethics Commission program in September. The City of Lake
Worth has requested their staff to review early participation. The Village of Royal
Palm Beach has also begun preliminary review via staff to staff. We have no
information on any community that has decided to not pursue participation with
the Ethics Commission following initial review.
H?
Please see answers to the above Q&A.
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
There will be no financial impact to the City other than staff coordination costs
ISCAL MPACT
for the training.
A:
Do not proceed with the enabling ordinance at this time.
LTERNATIVES
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ORDINANCE NO. 10-____
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA AMENDING THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH CODE OF ORDINANCES ARTICLE I, BY
CREATING SECTION 2-25, TO BE ENTITLED “CODE OF ETHICS”;
INCORPORATING BY REFERENCE THE PALM BEACH COUNTY
CODE OF ETHICS INTO THE CITY’S CODE OF ORDINANCES;
PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS, SEVERABILITY AND AN
.
EFFECTIVE DATE
WHEREAS
, the Board of County Commissioners of Palm Beach County, pursuant to its
authority under Florida Constitution, Article VIII, Section 1(g), Section 125.01, Florida Statutes, the
Palm Beach County Charter, and section 112.326, Florida, adopted the Palm Beach County Code of
Ethics and created the Palm Beach County Commission on Ethics (Commission on Ethics); and
WHEREAS,
the Board of County Commissioners and the City of Boynton Beach desire to have
the Code of Ethics regulations and the Commission on Ethics jurisdiction to apply to the City of
Boynton Beach; and
WHEREAS,
the Board of County Commissioners and the City of Boynton Beach have entered
into an Interlocal Agreement to provide services to the City of Boynton Beach in the same manner that
as those services are provided to Palm Beach County as set forth herein; and
WHEREAS,
the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach finds that adopting the Palm
Beach County’s Code of Ethics is in the best interests of the citizens and residents of the City.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. The foregoing whereas clauses are true and correct and are now ratified and
confirmed by the City Commission.
Section 2. Article I, Section 2-25 of the City’s Code of Ordinances, to be entitled “Code of
Ethics”, is hereby created as follows:
Sec. 2-25 Code of Ethics
The City of Boynton Beach hereby adopts by reference as its own the Palm Beach County
Code of Ethics, Palm Beach County Code, Chapter 2, Article XII, sections 2-441 through 2-
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443, section 2-444(c), (d), and (e), section 2-445 through section 2-448, and the Palm Beach
County Commission on Ethics, Palm Beach County Code, Chapter 2, Article V, Division 8,
sections 2-254 through 2-260.10, as may be amended from time to time.
Section 3. The Palm Beach County Code of Ethics and Commission on Ethics ordinances in
existence as of the effective date of this Ordinance are hereby incorporated by reference and attached
hereto as Exhibits 1 and 2 respectively.
Section 4. All references to county government provided for in the Palm Beach County
Commission on Ethics and Code of Ethics ordinances, including but not limited to county elected and
appointed officials, county employees, county divisions and departments, shall be deemed as reference
to the corresponding elected and appointed officers, divisions and departments of the City of Boynton
Beach as appropriate to effectuate the intent of this Ordinance.
Section 5. Each and every other provision of the City of Boynton Beach Code of Ordinances
not herein specifically amended, shall remain in full force and effect as originally adopted.
Section 6. All laws and ordinances applying to the City of Boynton Beach in conflict with
any provisions of this ordinance are hereby repealed.
Section 7. Should any section or provision of this Ordinance or any portion thereof be
declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such decision shall not affect the remainder
of this Ordinance.
Section 8. This Ordinance shall become effective immediately.
FIRST READING this ____ day of _______________, 2010.
SECOND, FINAL READING AND PASSAGE this _____ day of _____________, 2010.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
364 of 408
______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner- Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
___________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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14. B
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RACC:
PROPOSED RESOLUTION NO. R10-120 - Approve an
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
interlocal agreement with Palm Beach County for Ethics Commission Oversight. (TABLED ON
SEPTEMBER 7, 2010)
ER:
The City Commission authorized the City Attorney and the City Manager
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
to work with the new Ethics Commission of Palm Beach County to ascertain the procedure for an
earlier participation in the Ethics Commission in advance of the November 2010 referendum. The
City Attorney and City Manager met with County staff on Monday, August 23, 2010 to review the
program and operation of the Ethics Commission and the Inspector General. The enabling
Ordinance was approved on September 7, 2010 on first reading and is scheduled for second and
final reading September 21, 2010. Adoption of the enabling Ordinance is a prerequisite to the
adoption of the Resolution authorizing the Interlocal Agreement. If the Commission does not
approve or defers the adoption of the enabling Ordinance no action on this agenda item is required.
The proposal from the County would be only for Ethics Commission participation. If the City
Commission authorizes the Interlocal agreement, we would not be subject to the Inspector
General’s oversight. The County has determined that municipal participation in that aspect of
the program must wait until it is determined that the referendum passes in November. Even
then, it is anticipated that the conversion process to place municipalities under the IG’s office
won’t occur until March 2011 at the earliest. The reason for this is that the fee structure for
municipal participation must be developed in cooperation with the League of Cities. This
means that if the City opts to join the Ethics Commission in September, there will be no cost to
the City for their services.
395 of 408
Once an Agreement is entered into, City officials, employees and Advisory Board
Members will be required to comply with the County Ethics Code and will be subject to
the jurisdiction of the Ethics Commission.
The City will be required to cooperate with the ethics training required by the County.
With the exception of the loss of work time
By City employees for training, there is no charge for the training.
The City will also be obligated to cooperate in the investigatory stage. This will include
providing records and allowing access to the Ethics Commission investigatory
personnel.
The ILA grants the Ethics Commission these powers:
(A) The Commission on Ethics shall have the authority to: (1) review, interpret,
render advisory opinions and enforce the Code of Ethics, Post-employment
and lobbyist registration ordinances; (2) investigate legally sufficient
complaints within the jurisdiction of the Commission on Ethics and
conduct public hearings as provided by the Commission on Ethics
ordinance; and (3) develop and deliver, or contract with other entities to
develop and deliver training programs and ensure that effective and
meaningful training experiences are delivered in a timely and efficient
manner.
(B) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to conduct investigations,
and receive full and unrestricted access to the records of the Public Entity,
all elected and appointed Public Entity officials and employees, Public
Entity departments, divisions, agencies and instrumentalities, contractors
and other persons and entities doing business with the Public Entity and/or
receiving Public Entity funds regarding any such contracts or transactions
with the Public Entity.
(C) In the case of a refusal to obey a request for documents or for an interview,
the Commission on Ethics shall have the power to subpoena witnesses,
administer oaths, and require the production of records in a manner
consistent with section 162.08 Florida Statutes. The Commission on
Ethics shall not interfere with any ongoing criminal investigation or
prosecution of the State Attorney or the U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Florida.
(D) Where the Commission on Ethics suspects a possible violation of any
state, federal or local law, or rule, regulation or policy, the Executive
Director or designee shall notify the appropriate civil, criminal or
administrative agencies. In the case of a possible violation of a rule,
regulation or policy governing a Public Entity employee, the Executive
Director or designee shall also notify the governing body of the Public
Entity and the head of the Department for which the employee works.
(E) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to require officials and
employees to participate in ethics training on a regular basis.
(F) The Commission on Ethics’ “hotline” will receive complaints related to
Public Entity operations. The Public Entity will support and assist the
Commission on Ethics in publicizing the “hotline” and encouraging the
reporting of ethics violations by local citizens, officials and employees.
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(G) The Commission on Ethics may exercise any of the powers contained in
the Commission on Ethics Ordinance upon its own initiative.
(H) With the exception of the initial complaint filed in a matter, all records held
by the Commission on Ethics and its staff related to an active preliminary
investigation are confidential and exempt from disclosure in a manner
consistent with the provisions in s. 112.3188(2) Florida Statutes.
(I) The Commission on Ethics and its staff shall be considered “an
appropriate local official” of the Public Entity for purposes of whistleblower
protection provided by s. 112.3188(1), Florida Statutes.
(J) The Commission on Ethics may recommend remedial actions and may
provide prevention and training services to Public Entity officials,
employees, and any other persons covered by this Agreement. The
Commission on Ethics may follow up to determine whether recommended
remedial actions have been taken.
(K) The Commission on Ethics shall monitor the costs of investigations
undertaken. The Commission on Ethics shall cooperate with other
governmental agencies to recover restitution from other entities involved in
willful misconduct in regard to Public Entity funds.
(L) In any case in which the Commission on Ethics determines that the
complaining party filed a frivolous or groundless complaint as defined in s.
57.105 Florida Statutes, or a complaint with malicious intent and with the
knowledge that the complaint contains material false allegations, the
commission shall order the complaining party to pay any costs and
attorneys fees incurred by the commission and/or the alleged violator.
(M) The Commission on Ethics will maintain a website and all required
databases including gift reports, lobbyist expenses (after 2011),
enforcement decisions and advisory opinions.
(N) The Commission on Ethics shall annually prepare and publish a written
report concerning the work and activities of the Office of Commission on
Ethics.
H?
Please see answers to the above Q&A.
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
FI:
There will be no financial impact to the City other than staff coordination
ISCAL MPACT
costs for the training.
A:
Do not proceed with the Interlocal agreement at this time.
LTERNATIVES
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RESOLUTION NO. R10-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF BOYNTON BEACH,
FLORIDA, APPROVING THE INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH AND PALM BEACH COUNTY
ALLOWING THE PALM BEACH COUNTY COMMISSION ON ETHICS TO
EXERCISE THE AUTHORITY, FUNCTIONS AND POWERS GRANTED BY
THE COMMISSION ON ETHICS ORDINANCE AS TO THE CITY’S
OPERATIONS; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS
, the Interlocal Agreement permits the City of Boynton Beach to participate in the
Ethics Commission portion of the County program while not being subject to the Inspector General’s
oversight; and
WHEREAS
, the City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, upon recommendation of staff,
deems it to be in the best interests of the residents and citizens of the City of Boynton Beach to approve
the Inlerlocal Agreement between the City of Boynton Beach and Palm Beach County allowing the
Palm Beach County Commission on Ethics to exercise the authority, functions and powers granted to it
by the Commission on Ethics Ordinance as to the City of Boynton Beach’s operations.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY
OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA, THAT:
Section 1. Each Whereas clause set forth above is true and correct and incorporated herein
by this reference.
Section 2. The City Commission of the City of Boynton Beach, Florida does hereby approve
the Agreement between the City of Boynton Beach and Palm Beach County allowing the Palm Beach
County Commission on Ethics to exercise the authority, functions and powers granted to it by the
Commission on Ethics Ordinance as to the City of Boynton Beach’s operations, a copy of said
Agreement is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”.
Section 3. That this Resolution shall become effective immediately upon passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED
this _____ day of September, 2010.
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CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
______________________________
Mayor – Jose Rodriguez
______________________________
Vice Mayor – Marlene Ross
______________________________
Commissioner – William Orlove
_______________________________
Commissioner – Woodrow L. Hay
_______________________________
Commissioner – Steven Holzman
ATTEST:
_________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC
City Clerk
(Corporate Seal)
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INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT
This Interlocal Agreement (“Agreement”) is made on ____________________, 2010, between
the City of Boynton Beach, a municipality located in Palm Beach County, Florida ("Public Entity"), and
Palm Beach County, a political subdivision of the State of Florida (“County”), each one constituting a
public agency as defined in Part I of Chapter 163, Florida Statutes.
W I T N E S S E T H
WHEREAS
, Section 163.01, Florida Statutes, known as the "Florida Interlocal Cooperation Act
of 1969" authorizes local governments to make the most efficient use of their powers by enabling them
to cooperate with other localities on a basis of mutual advantage and thereby to provide services and
facilities that will harmonize geographic, economic, population and other factors influencing the needs
and development of local communities; and
WHEREAS,
Part I of Chapter 163, Florida Statutes, permits public agencies as defined therein
to enter into interlocal agreements with each other to jointly exercise any power, privilege, or authority
which such agencies share in common and which each might exercise separately; and
WHEREAS
, the Palm Beach County Commission on Ethics Ordinance (the Commission on
Ethics Ordinance) permits the Commission on Ethics of Palm Beach County (“the Commission on
Ethics”), subject to approval by the Board of County Commissioners, to negotiate agreements or
memoranda of understanding with municipalities, special districts, and other public offices and entities,
authorizing the Commission on Ethics to exercise any and all authority, functions and powers set forth
in the Commission on Ethics Ordinance for the benefit of such Public Entity.
WHEREAS,
Public Entity wishes to have the Commission on Ethics exercise such authority,
functions and powers for Public Entity’s benefit.
NOW THEREFORE,
in consideration of the mutual representations, terms, and covenants
hereinafter set forth, the parties hereby agree as follows:
Section 1. Purpose
The purpose of this Agreement is to have the Commission on Ethics exercise the authority,
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functions and powers granted by the Commission on Ethics Ordinance as to Public Entity’s operations.
Section 2. Representative/Monitoring Position
The County’s representative/contract monitor during the term of this Agreement shall be Alan S.
Johnson, Executive Director, whose telephone number is (561) 233-0724.
The Public Entity’s representative/contract monitor during the term of this Agreement shall be
Public Entity’s City Manager, Kurt Bressner, whose telephone number is (561) 742-6010.
Section 3. Effective Date and Term
This Agreement shall take effect upon execution of this Agreement by the Board of County
Commissioners. This Agreement will then be in effect for one (1) year. This Agreement may be
terminated by either party upon ninety (90) days written notice to the other party. In the event the
County adopts countywide ethics regulations pursuant to its charter authority which supersede the ethics
ordinances subject to this Agreement, this agreement will terminate upon the effective date of the
countywide ethics regulations. Upon notice of termination by Public Entity or termination by
superseding regulations, any ongoing Public Entity investigations being conducted by the Commission
on Ethics pursuant to this Agreement shall continue until completed.
Section 4. Responsibilities and Duties
The Commission on Ethics shall exercise any and all authority, functions and powers provided
for in the Commission on Ethics Ordinance and Code of Ethics Ordinance in regard to Public Entity’s
operations.
Those functions, authority and powers include the following:
The Commission on Ethics shall have the authority to: (1) review, interpret, render
advisory opinions and enforce the Code of Ethics, (2) investigate legally sufficient
complaints within the jurisdiction of the Commission on Ethics and conduct public
hearings as provided by the Commission on Ethics ordinance; and (3) develop and
deliver, or contract with other entities to develop and deliver training programs and
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ensure that effective and meaningful training experiences are delivered in a timely and
efficient manner.
(B) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to conduct investigations, and receive
full and unrestricted access to the records of the Public Entity, all elected and appointed
Public Entity officials and employees, Public Entity departments, divisions, agencies and
instrumentalities, contractors and other persons and entities doing business with the
Public Entity and/or receiving Public Entity funds regarding any such contracts or
transactions with the Public Entity.
(C) In the case of a refusal to obey a request for documents or for an interview, the
Commission on Ethics shall have the power to subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, and
require the production of records in a manner consistent with section 162.08 Florida
Statutes. The Commission on Ethics shall not interfere with any ongoing criminal
investigation or prosecution of the State Attorney or the U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Florida.
(D) Where the Commission on Ethics suspects a possible violation of any state, federal or
local law, or rule, regulation or policy, the Executive Director or designee shall notify
the appropriate civil, criminal or administrative agencies. In the case of a possible
violation of a rule, regulation or policy governing a Public Entity employee, the
Executive Director or designee shall also notify the governing body of the Public Entity
and the head of the Department for which the employee works.
(E) The Commission on Ethics shall have the power to require officials and employees to
participate in ethics training on a regular basis.
(F) The Commission on Ethics’ “hotline” will receive complaints related to Public Entity
operations. The Public Entity will support and assist the Commission on Ethics in
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publicizing the “hotline” and encouraging the reporting of ethics violations by local
citizens, officials and employees.
(G) The Commission on Ethics may exercise any of the powers contained in the Commission
on Ethics Ordinance upon its own initiative.
(H) With the exception of the initial complaint filed in a matter, all records held by the
Commission on Ethics and its staff related to an active preliminary investigation are
confidential and exempt from disclosure in a manner consistent with the provisions in s.
112.3188(2) Florida Statutes.
(I) The Commission on Ethics and its staff shall be considered “an appropriate local official”
of the Public Entity for purposes of whistleblower protection provided by s. 112.3188(1),
Florida Statutes.
(J) The Commission on Ethics may recommend remedial actions and may provide
prevention and training services to Public Entity officials, employees, and any other
persons covered by this Agreement. The Commission on Ethics may follow up to
determine whether recommended remedial actions have been taken.
(K) The Commission on Ethics shall monitor the costs of investigations undertaken. The
Commission on Ethics shall cooperate with other governmental agencies to recover
restitution from other entities involved in willful misconduct in regard to Public Entity
funds.
(L) In any case in which the Commission on Ethics determines that the complaining party
filed a frivolous or groundless complaint as defined in s. 57.105 Florida Statutes, or a
complaint with malicious intent and with the knowledge that the complaint contains
material false allegations, the commission shall order the complaining party to pay any
costs and attorneys fees incurred by the commission and/or the alleged violator.
(M) The Commission on Ethics will maintain a website and all required databases including
gift reports, voting conflict disclosures, final orders and advisory opinions.
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(N) The Commission on Ethics shall annually prepare and publish a written report concerning
the work and activities of the Office of Commission on Ethics.
Section 5. Funding and Budgeting by Public Entity
All costs associated with the duties and responsibilities of the Commission on Ethics are funded
by The Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners. County funding shall include all staff
services and other resources to be provided in furtherance of this Agreement.
Section 6. Notice
All notices required to be given under this Agreement shall be deemed sufficient to each party
when delivered by United States Mail to the following:
County Public Entity
Section 7. Delegation of Duty
Nothing contained herein shall be deemed to authorize the delegation of the constitutional or
statutory duties of state, county, or municipal officers.
Section 8. Filing
A copy of this Agreement shall be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court in and for Palm
Beach County.
Section 9. Liability
The parties to this Agreement and their respective officers and employees shall not be deemed to
assume any liability for the acts, omissions, and negligence of the other party. Further, nothing herein
shall be construed as a waiver of sovereign immunity by either party, pursuant to Section 768.28,
Florida Statutes.
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Section 10. Remedies
This Agreement shall be construed by and governed by the laws of the State of Florida. Any and
all legal action necessary to enforce the Agreement will be held in Palm Beach County. No remedy
herein conferred upon any party is intended to be exclusive of any other remedy, and each and every
such remedy shall be cumulative and shall be in addition to every other remedy given hereunder or now
or hereafter existing at law or in equity or by statute or otherwise. No single or partial exercise by any
party of any right, power, or remedy hereunder shall preclude any other or further exercise thereof.
Section 11. Time of the Essence
The parties expressly agree that time is of the essence in this Agreement and the failure by a
party to complete performance within the time specified, or within a reasonable time if no time is
specified herein, shall, at the option of the other party without liability, in addition to any other rights or
remedies, relieve the other party of any obligation to accept such performance.
Section 12. Equal Opportunity Provision
Commission on Ethics and Public Entity agree that no person shall, on the grounds of race, color,
religion, sex, age, national origin, ancestry, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity and
expression, or disability be excluded from the benefits of, or be subjected to any form of discrimination
under any activity carried out by the performance of this Agreement.
Section 13. Captions
The captions and section designations herein set forth are for convenience only and shall have no
substantive meaning.
Section 14. Severability
In the event that any section, paragraph, sentence, clause, or provision hereof is held by a court
of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such shall not affect the remaining portions of this Agreement
and the same shall remain in full force and effect.
[The remainder of this page intentionally left blank]
405 of 408
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Section 15. Entirety of Agreement
This Agreement represents the entire understanding between the parties, and supersedes all other
negotiations, representations, or agreements, either written or oral, relating to this Agreement.
ATTEST PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA, THROUGH ITS
BOARD OF COUNTY
Sharon R. Bock, Clerk & Comptroller COMMISSIONERS
By:_____________________________ By:_________________________________
Clerk __________________, Chair
(SEAL)
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND APPROVED AS TO TERMS AND
LEGAL SUFFICIENCY CONDITIONS
By:____________________________ By:_________________________________
County Attorney ________________, Commission on Ethics
ATTEST: CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
By:____________________________ By:_________________________________
Janet M. Prainito, MMC, Clerk Jose Rodriguez, Mayor
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND
LEGAL SUFFICIENCY
By: ____________________________
James A. Cherof, City Attorney
407 of 408
14. C
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
September 21, 2010
COBB
ITY F OYNTON EACH
AIRF
GENDA TEM EQUEST ORM
CMD:
September 21, 2010
OMMISSION EETING ATE
O PH
PENINGSUBLIC EARING
O CM’R
THERITY ANAGERS EPORT
A/P FAI
NNOUNCEMENTSRESENTATIONSUTURE GENDA TEMS
NO
ATURE F
A NB
DMINISTRATIVEEW USINESS
AI
GENDA TEM
CA L
ONSENT GENDAEGAL
BP$100,000 UB
IDS AND URCHASES OVER NFINISHED USINESS
CCL
ODE OMPLIANCE AND EGAL
S
ETTLEMENTS
RACC:
Appoint members to 7-member independent Community
EQUESTED CTION BY ITY OMMISSION
Redevelopment Agency Board.
thth
ER:
The interviews were conducted August 24 and September 7,
XPLANATION OF EQUEST
2010. The interviewees were the following:
James Buchanan
Edward Cairo
R. Reed Daniel
Michael Grosh
Nancy Hogan
Mark Karageorge
Revia Lee
David Madigan
Dr. Martha Meeks-Light
Genevieve Morris
The next step in the process would be the appointment of the board members.
H?
The City Commission continues to
OW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES
operate as the Community Redevelopment Agency Board so there would be no affect on City
programs or services.
FI:
N/A
ISCAL MPACT
A:
N/A
LTERNATIVES
408 of 408